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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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Showing 158,205 records of 158,205 total. We are displaying one thousand.

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Fitts Davidview full entry
Reference: Jack. Le Vin de Amants. Poems from Baudelaire. Monoprints by David Fitts. One of Richard Griffin’s first books and the only work illustrated by Fitts who died very young.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Gryphon Books, 1977. Octavo, cloth boards in illustrated slipcase, 60pp. with illustrations throughout. Limited to 600 copies, signed by author and artist.
Ref: 1000
Frank Daleview full entry
Reference: Dale Frank, illustrated in colour, exhibition list, bibliography.
Publishing details: Canberra School of Art, 1985. Folio, illustrated wrappers, 17pp.
Ref: 1000
French Leonardview full entry
Reference: Leonard French. Catalogue with two black and white illustrations, appreciation by Alan McCulloch,
Publishing details: London: Commonwealth Institute Art Gallery, 1967. Small quarto, illustrated wrappers with colour reproduction, 8pp.
Ref: 1000
French Leonardview full entry
Reference: The Bridge. Leonard French paintings.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Powell Street Gallery, 1985. Oblong folio, wrappers, 20pp. illustrated in black and white, catalogue of works, price list enclosed.
Ref: 1000
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: The Surprising Adventures of Blue- Eyed Patty. The Valiant Female Soldier.
Reprinted from the pamphlet originally published by J. Hately of Wolverhampton, circa 1805., and further embellished with illustrations by Donald Friend. Hand-printed at the Croft Press. Limited to 250 numbered copies signed by Friend. The story of Patty Freelove, who, attired as a man, followed her sweetheart to Botany Bay.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Croft Press, 1979. Octavo, printed wrappers, Friend illustrations throughout. Limited to 250 copies, signed and numbered by Donald Friend and bound by Richard Griffin.
Ref: 1000
FRIEND, Donald. view full entry
Reference: Sundry notes & papers: being the recently discovered notes and documents of the Natural & Instinctive Bestiality Research Expedition, collected and collated under the title BUMBOOZIANA.

Bumbooziana is a fantastic, exotic and erotic journey through foreign lands, illustrated by all manner of wild and outrageous acts of wanton sexual abandonment.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Gryphon Books, 1979. Elephant folio (580mm tall) bound in gilt-titled half-calf over buckram gilt- decorated with Donald Friend illustrations, in matching slipcase with leather title label. 125pp. richly and extravagantly illustrated with gold highlights, the book reproducing Donald Friend’s most famous and important illustrated manuscript. Limited to 150 copies signed by the artist and publisher plus 20 hors d’commerce, this edition was heavily over- subscribed upon publication.
Ref: 1000
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: Donald Friend. His books and art. 73 books and artworks catalogued, being a comprehensive collection of publications about Friend.
Publishing details: Sydney: Antique Bookshop & Curios, 1989. Large octavo, illustrated wrappers, 16pp. illustrated in black and white,
Fries Ernestview full entry
Reference: Ernest Fries. Sculptures and drawings. An insight into the creative work in Australia 1959 – 1984.
Publishing details: Wurzburg: Otto-Richter-Halle, 1984. Oblong octavo, wrappers, 36pp. illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Fullbrook Samview full entry
Reference: Sam Fullbrook. With numerous photographs and extensive text.
Publishing details: Main Beach [QLD]: Art Galleries Schubert, 1995. Small quarto, wrappers, 8pp.,
Ref: 1000
Gibbs Mayview full entry
Reference: Pink Pearl Chocolate Box. Original cardboard chocolate box c. 1930s with attractive May Gibbs design incorporating Little Obelia. Measures 100 x 180 x 50mm.
Ref: 1000
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: James Gleeson. Eden adjusted by Climate Change.
Publishing details: Sydney: Watters Gallery, 2006. Folio, illustrated wrappers, 8pp. illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Glover Johnview full entry
Reference: John Glover: The Prints and Associated Material. Introduction by John A. McPhee, 25 prints and drawings listed. Catalogue of an exhibition held 19 August - 4 October 1976, Old Watercolour Gallery, Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery, Launceston.
Publishing details: Launceston: Queen Victorian Museum and Art Gallery, 1976. Small oblong folio, illustrated wrappers, 8pp.
Green Mikeview full entry
Reference: Mike Green Recent Watercolours. 13 September – 29 September, 1988.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Realities Gallery, 1988. Quarto, 20pp. Colour plates throughout.
Ref: 1000
Grey-Smith Helen view full entry
Reference: Helen Grey-Smith. A retrospective exhibition. Essay by Maggie Baxter, biographical notes, 85 works listed.
Publishing details: Perth: Curtain University of Technology, 1987. Folio, colour illustrated folder, loose leaf pages, 10pp.
Ref: 1000
Thompson Frank Royview full entry
Reference: Paintings by V. M. Griffin and F. R. Thompson shown at th’ Melbourne Athenaeum in December of the year 1925.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Atheneum Gallery, 1925. Octavo, string-tied card wrappers, 4pp., catalogue of 90 works.
Ref: 1000
Griffin Vaughan Murrayview full entry
Reference: see Paintings by V. M. Griffin and F. R. Thompson shown at th’ Melbourne Athenaeum in December of the year 1925.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Atheneum Gallery, 1925. Octavo, string-tied card wrappers, 4pp., catalogue of 90 works.
Herbert Haroldview full entry
Reference: Autumn Leaves. Verses and letters by L. L. Politzer. Pencil drawings by Harold B. Herbert.
Publishing details: Melbourne: ‘Pan’ Publishing House, n.d. [194-]. Tall octavo, card wrappers with yapp edges, 64pp with numerous monochrome reproductions of the well-known traditional painter’s drawings.
Ref: 1000
Heysen Hansview full entry
Reference: Hans Heysen: Retrospective Exhibition 1901-1965. 111 works listed, introduction by Sir Edward Hayward.
Publishing details: Adelaide: John Martin & Co., 1966. Small folio, colour illustrated wrappers, 10pp.
Ref: 1008
Heysen Hansview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of oils and watercolours by Hans Heysen. Features comment by Lionel Lindsay, 7 tipped-in plates, 58 works listed. The first one man exhibition of Heysen in Sydney.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer and Company, 1926. Small quarto, wrappers, 12pp lightly foxed.
Ref: 1000
Hahndorf Academy Festival of Arts view full entry
Reference: Hahndorf Academy Festival of Arts Exhibitions 1972. The exhibition features 71 works by Heysen as well as collections of paintings by Lloyd Rees, Pro Hart, Arthur Murch etc.
Publishing details: Adelaide: Hahndorf Academy, 1972. Octavo, wrappers, 8pp.
Ref: 1000
Hinder Frankview full entry
Reference: rank Hinder. Survey Exhibition 1931 – 1980, catalogue of 88 works.
Publishing details: Melbourne: 27 Niagara Lane Galleries, [c. 1980]. Folio, folding card, three illustrations,
Ref: 1000
Ho Hariview full entry
Reference: Hari Ho: secret light. 21 May – 8 June 2003. Colour catalogue to the exhibition of Ho’s work.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Metro 5 Gallery, 2003.
Ref: 1000
Hodgkinson Frankview full entry
Reference: Frank Hodgkinson, Paintings, Drawings and Prints: Arnhem Land 1978-79. Catalogue of an important exhibition of Hodgkinson’s impression of Arnhem Land. Numerous illustrations, chronology and lists of other exhibitions and collections.
Publishing details: Darwin: Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory, 1979. Oblong octavo, colour illustrated wrappers, 20pp.
Ref: 1000
Hughes Gordonview full entry
Reference: Gordon Hughes. Exhibition of Paintings & Drawings.
Publishing details: East Melbourne: Cato Gallery, 1974. Folding card invitation to Gordon Hughes’ exhibition.
Ref: 1000
Hunter Robertview full entry
Reference: Australia 1971. Robert Hunter. Quarto tri-fold card catalogue, lettered in silver on front and on inside panel, the rest of the catalogue is blank. Produced for Hunter’s exhibition at the Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi. It exhibited an installation based on the stencilled grid format employed in his previous Pinacotheca exhibition. This artist’s statement is the first and one of the few published statement’s Hunter made about his art: ‘I want to make something alien – alien to myself. I want to produce something that is neutral – if it is neutral enough it just is ...’. An important landmark catalogue in Australian Minimalism.
Ref: 1000
Worth Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Charles Nodrum Gallery, February, 2017: The gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of Margaret Worth's works from the 1960s - shaped and regular canvases, and prints, from both the 'Genus' and 'Samsara' series.

After studies of music, physics, pure and applied maths, psychology and philosophy, Worth began classes under Sydney Ball at the South Australian School of Art.  Scientific principles and Eastern philosophies underpinned her drive to achieve, in her own words, "as close a marriage between form and colour" as possible.

Margaret will be included in the Geelong Gallery's forthcoming exhibition of works from the National Gallery of Australia's collections - 'Abstraction: celebrating Australian women abstract artists'.  A 1960s shaped painting in two parts was recently acquired by the Art Gallery of New South Wales. 
Coates Dora Meeson (1869-1955)view full entry
Reference: see HANSONS AUCTIONEERS AND VALUERS, UK, 21 February, lot 361: Dora Meeson Coates (1869-1955), study of ivy and flowers, gouache, 1935, 45cm x 30cm Note: Australian artist, Dora Meeson, became a prominent figure in the Women's Suffrage movement as well as an accomplished artist and member of the Royal Institute of Oil Painters.
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: Michael Johnson: Paintings 1968-1986. Catalogue of 15 works exhibited at Melbourne University in 1986 when Johnson was the artist in residence. Essay by Terence Maloon on Johnson’s technique and interpretations of his work.
Publishing details: Melbourne: University of Melbourne, 1986. Small folio, wrappers, 38pp.
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: Christine Abrahams Gallery - catalogue . Michael Johnson. Paintings 1 June – 27 June, 1996. illustrated in colour with extensive biographical notes.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Christine Abrahams Gallery. Folio, tri-fold card catalogue, 1996
Ref: 1000
Juniper Robertview full entry
Reference: Asphodel by Lilla Cole, illustrated by Robert Juniper.
Publishing details: Fremantle: Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1982. Folio, illustrated boards in illustrated card slipcase, 77pp illustrated by Juniper throughout. Limited to 500 copies signed and numbered by the artist and dated ’82.
Ref: 1000
Kelly Williamview full entry
Reference: William Kelly at Mildura; themes and images. Features a forward written by Roger Butler, Kelly’s curriculum vitae and several plates of Kelly’s work.
Publishing details: Mildura, Oblong octavo, 24pp.
Ref: 1000
Klippel Robertview full entry
Reference: Make it new. A portrait of the sculptor Robert Klippel. a profile documentary on the artist.
Publishing details: Sydney Featherstone Productions, 2000s. New DVD, running time 54 minutes,
Ref: 1000
Kngwarreye Emily Kameview full entry
Reference: Earth’s Creation. The paintings of Emily Kngwarreye. Melbourne:Includes essay by Daniel Thomas.
Publishing details: Malakoff Fine Art Press, 1998. Folio, illustrated wrappers, 16pp. illustrated, some plates folding,
Ref: 1000
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: STEPHENSON, P.R. Kookaburras and Satyrs. Some recollections of The Fanfrolico Press. Sydney: The author recall his days as co-editor of The Fanfrolico Press in London, and in particular the influence of Norman Lindsay on the Press.
Publishing details: Talkarra Press, 1954. Octavo, gilt-lettered cloth, 35pp. Printed in an edition of 225 numbered copies. The first book of the Talkarra Press, and signed by the publisher Walter Stone.
Ref: 1000
Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Twice on Sundays. Catalogue containing numerous colour illustrations of recent paintings, text by Yenda Carson and selected biography of the artist. Printed in an edition of 1000 copies.
Publishing details: Brisbane, Fox Galleries, 2005. Small quarto, wrappers, 32pp.
Ref: 1000
Macleod Euanview full entry
Reference: Wet and Wild. This is a catalogue of an exhibition that showcased Macleod’s abstract landscapes and portraits. There is a comment by Neil Rowe on MacLeod’s work and his major influences.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Nigara Galleries, 2002. Oblong folio, colour illustrated wrappers, 28pp.
Ref: 1000
Maltby Pegview full entry
Reference: COLCLOUGH, Ellie P. Speak-Well Books.
Book 1. “Musical Vowels”. illustrated by Maltby throughout.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Whitcombe
& Tombs, 1944. Octavo, illustrated wrappers by
Maltby, 128pp.
Ref: 1000
Margocsy Paulview full entry
Reference: Paul Margocsy. Away with the birds.
Fully illustrated with Margocsy’s realist
paintings of Australian birds. ‘A superbly produced volume on the internationally recognised and 514. popular wildlife artist.’
Publishing details: Melbourne: the artist, 2008. Folio, gilt-lettered cloth
with pictorial inlay, all edges gilt, ribbon marker. 513. 112pp. Original launch invitation card
loosely enclosed. The deluxe edition,
limited to 300 signed and numbered copies, accompanied by an original print also signed and
numbered by the artist.
Ref: 1000
May Philview full entry
Reference: A second catalogue of original drawings by Phil May for “The Bulletin”. Auction catalogue of original May drawings sold by the owners of The Bulletin.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Gemmel, Tuckett & Co., 1903. Octavo, decorated wrappers, 28pp. illustrated,
Ref: 1000
McCahon Colinview full entry
Reference: Colin McCahon. “Necessary Protection.” Book features black and white plates and a series of essays that analyse McCahon’s work.
Publishing details: New Plymouth: Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, 1977. Oblong octavo, 43pp.
Ref: 1000
McCahon Colinview full entry
Reference: Colin McCahon. A time for messages. ‘A useful reference which draws links with Australian painters.’
Publishing details: Melbourne: NGV, 2001. Folio, folding folio card catalogue, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
eight new zealand artistsview full entry
Reference: Eight New Zealand Artists. Binney, Ellis, Garrity, Hanly, McCahon, Mrkusich, Ritchie and Twiss. Features a short biography on all the artists and black and white plates of their work.
Publishing details: Melbourne: NGV, c. 1970s. Quarto, 20pp., illustrated wrappers by McCahon (creased).
Ref: 1000
McDonald Angusview full entry
Reference: Angus McDonald: Selected Paintings 2001-2006. Includes reproductions of paintings and an essay by Jacqueline Miller.
Publishing details: Lismore Regional Gallery, 2006. Small oblong folio, colour illustrated wrappers, 32pp.,
Ref: 1000
Molvig Johnview full entry
Reference: John Molvig. The lost Antipodean. By Betty Churcher. ‘The essential reference on the artist. This the deluxe edition, one of 100 copies bound in hardcover with a limitation statement signed and dated by the author, privately sold by Mary Martin Bookshop.’
Publishing details: Melbourne: Penguin, 1984. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, 156pp. illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Mort Ireneview full entry
Reference: Eirene Mort. The Old Roads. With reproductions of Mort’s artworks, etchings, of historic Sydney.
Publishing details: Sydney: 1931. Quarto, printed wrappers with cord ties (edge water stained), 16pp.
Ref: 1000
Namatjira Albertview full entry
Reference: Albert Namatjira- Souvenir Portfolio. Six watercolours in Central Australia by foremost Australian aboriginal artist. This collections of six watercolours is accompanied by a photo of the artist and short comment by Rex Battarbee.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Legend Press, 1956. Colour illustrated paper envelope with six loose leaf sleeves.
Ref: 1000
Para Cultureview full entry
Reference: Para Culture by Rex Butler, Keith Broadfoot, Ross Gibson, Meaghan Morris (writers, Sally Couacaud (curator) et al. Exhibition catalog of Artspace Sydney event including artists - Gordon Bennett, Janet Burchill, Fiona Foley, Matthys Gerber, Jeff Gibson, Tim Johnson, Narelle Jubelin and Lindy Lee. Includes color images and essays by various art critics and curators.
Publishing details: Published by Artspace Sydney, Australia (1990). Artspace Sydney, Australia, 1990. Soft cover. 1st Edition. 44 pages
Ref: 225
Ropar Dennisview full entry
Reference: True Men: Dennis Ropar. ‘Dennis Ropars' art exhibited 24 May - 6 June Span Gallery and 22 May - 13 June 2005 at Pop Shop Gallery, Melbourne. [’Dennis Ropar and he is unique view of modern day advertising, comics and the American dream.’] Llimited to 1300 copies . Laid in promotional card for Ropar plus typed essay on Ropar.’
Publishing details: Ropar Industries, Melbourne Australia, 2004. Soft cover. 1st Edition. 24 pages -
Witness To Warview full entry
Reference: Witness To War: Official Art & Photography 1999-2003, Robert Nichols (Ed).
‘A travelling exhibition created by the Australian War Memorial, Witness to war: official art & photography 1999-2003, brings together the work of the Memorial’s most recent official artists and photographers: Wendy Sharpe, Rick Amor, Peter Churcher and Lewis Miller (official artists); and David Dare Parker and Stephen Dupont (official photographers). It is an exhibition that reveals not only the arresting images these men and women have created, but also their own stories. Travelling to East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Solomon Islands, they crafted bodies of work that document Australia’s role in these regions and reflect their own experiences and interpretations. They are our witnesses to war. A selection of art works from the AWM's collection, relating to various major conflicts in which Australia has been involved. The focus is on Australian artists and photographers. The chapters include - continuing the tradition, conflict photography, the ADF overseas 1999-2003. Numerous color plates.’ Minimal biographical information.
Publishing details: Published by Australian War Memorial, Australia (2005), Soft cover. 1st Edition. 28 pages - p/b
Klippel Robertview full entry
Reference: see Sculpture on Another Scale Exhibition 5, Regional Development Program. Klippel, Armstrong & Suggett (illustrator). 1st Edition. 47 pages - A travelling exhibition of sculpture by 3 prominent Australian sculptors - Robert Klippel, John Armstrong and Colin Suggett. Numerous b&w plates.
Publishing details: Visual Arts Board, 1980, pb, 45pp
Armstrong Johnview full entry
Reference: see Sculpture on Another Scale Exhibition 5, Regional Development Program. Klippel, Armstrong & Suggett (illustrator). 1st Edition. 47 pages - A travelling exhibition of sculpture by 3 prominent Australian sculptors - Robert Klippel, John Armstrong and Colin Suggett. Numerous b&w plates.
Publishing details: Visual Arts Board, 1980, pb, 45pp
Review: Works by Women from the Permanent Collectionview full entry
Reference: Review: Works by Women from the Permanent Collection. Exhibition booklet for show of the same title held at the AGNSW in 1995 - extensive list of works by women artists whose work is held by the AGNSW - B&W plates
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, Australia, 1995. Soft cover. various (illustrator). 1st Edition. 28 pages.
Dall’Ava Augustineview full entry
Reference: If Only Carl Knew: A Sculptural Series 1989-2001, Augustine Dall'Ava. Exhibition catalog for sculpture of Augustine Dall'Ava
Publishing details: Stonington Stables Museum of Art Deakin University, Australia, 2002. Soft cover. 32 pages
Ref: 1000
Mawurndjul Johnview full entry
Reference: John Mawurndjul: Mapping Djang
Annandale Galleries. JOHN MAWURNDJUL was born at Mumeka in 1952. Mawurndjul has received global recognition for his work and is without doubt one of the most pre-eminent Aboriginal artists working today. Far from settling into a simple signature style his painting has consistently evolved, showing an immense degree of innovation. His work was recognised as a landmark in contemporary painting, when in 2003 he became the first Aboriginal artist to win the prestigious Clemenger Contemporary Art Prize at the National Gallery of Victoria.

Publishing details: Published by Ananadale Galleries, Australia (2006)
Ref: 1000
Edwards Laurenceview full entry
Reference: Laurence Edwards New Works
Andrea Gates. Catalog for 2015 exhibition held in Australia and London in 2015. This creative man’s reputation for excellence in the exploration of pathos in the human form in the sculptural tradition now precedes his new works. Edwards Man of Stones is captivating with its enquiring look and air of serenity, despite being weighed down by the detritus of our times.His exploration and interpretation of sculptural form is at the cutting edge of changes in the world of art, reflecting its fashions and passions. Color plates

Publishing details: Published by Messum's and Mossgreen, Australia (2015), 36pp
Ref: 1000
Yin-Yang China in Australiaview full entry
Reference: YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Painting: An Approach for Secondary Schoolsview full entry
Reference: Painting: An Approach for Secondary Schools by Barbara Dover. ‘To help the art teacher interact with the concepts and practices of painting, and to explore its language themes and methods thus helping students create meaningful images which communicate ideas.’

Publishing details: Published by Education Department of Victoria, Australia (1983), 89pp
Ref: 1000
Derby Maxview full entry
Reference: Printmaking by Max Derby. [’an analysis of the printmaking medium and is intended to assist teachers in the planning printmaking courses.' Includes: Printmaking - What is it? What are the Techniques of Printmaking? Why Printmaking? Programme Planning; Introducing Students to Printmaking; Appreciating Prints and Printmaking ‘]
Publishing details: Education Department of Victoria, Australia, 1982. Soft cover. Book Condition: various (illustrator). 1st Edition. 106 pages
Ref: 1000
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: Imants Tillers: Nature Speaks


Publishing details: Published by Greenway Art Gallery Adelaide, Australia (2011). 10 pages - Published to coincide with the exhibition of the same title held in Adelaide in 2011. Short essay by Tillers - color plates.
Ref: 1000
Abstraction: Spirit, Light, Pure Formview full entry
Reference: Abstraction: Spirit, Light, Pure Form
Charlie Sheard. Curatorial essay by Charlie Sheard - color plates. Artists include - Melinda Harper - Robert Jacks - Matthew Johnson - Ildiko Kovacs - Aida Tomescu et al.

Publishing details: Published by Tim Olsen Gallery, Australia (2001), 24pp
Ref: 1000
Art of Arnhem Landview full entry
Reference: Art of Arnhem Land 1940's-1970's
Tracey Lock-Weir. [’Charts the emergence of Aboriginal bark paintings from the sphere of anthropological interest into the public domain as a powerful form of contemporary art. Drawn entirely from the Art Gallery of South Australia's collection, the exhibition includes paintings and sculptures by senior artists who later became celebrated precursors of the Aboriginal Land Rights movement. ‘]

Publishing details: Published by Art Gallery of South Australia, Australia (2002), 8 pages - oversized fold out card publication with color plates.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Tiwi Pima Art: Bathurst and Melville islands
Stephen Anderson & Raphael Apuatimi

Publishing details: Published by Nguiu Nginingawila Production Centre, Northern Territory Australia (1987), 20pp
Ref: 1000
Walker Kathview full entry
Reference: The Rainbow Serpent by Oodgeroo Noonuccal (Kath Walker). The Australian Government funded a performance of The Rainbow Serpent Theatre for the World Expo 88 (Brisbane 1988). This booklet is a souvenir for that event

Publishing details: Published by Australian Government, Australia (1988), 44pp
Ref: 1000
Candid Camera: Australian Photographyview full entry
Reference: Candid Camera: Australian Photography 1950's-1970's byJulie Robinson. Catalogue for an exhibition of Australian documentary photographers held in Art Gallery of South Australia in 2010. Photos by Max Dupain, David Moore, Max Pam, Rennie Ellis, John Williams and others

Publishing details: Published by Art Gallery of South Australia, Australia (2010)
Robertson-Swann Ronview full entry
Reference: Ron Robertson-Swann: Survey 1965-1975
by Harry Nocolson. Exhibition brochure with b&w images of paintings and sculptures by this Australian artist held at the Newcastle Regional Gallery in 1975.

Publishing details: Published by Newcastle Regional Art Gallery, Australia (1975), 20pp
Ref: 1000
AGWA postcardsview full entry
Reference: The Art Gallery of Western Australia + 32 color postcards by Ella Fry et al

Publishing details: Published by Art Gallery of Western Australia, Australia (1979)
Ref: 1000
AGWA - Art Gallery of Western Australia openingview full entry
Reference: The Art Gallery of Western Australia - 12 pages - color brochure celebrating the opening of the new Art Gallery of Western Australia in 1979
Publishing details: Published by Art Gallery of Western Australia, Australia (1979), 12 pages - color brochure celebrating the opening of the new Art Gallery of Western Australia in 1979
Blizzard Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Blizzard Scared Stone by Mostyn Bradley-Moore & Caroline Field

Publishing details: Published by Stonington Stables Museum of Art Deakin University, Australia (2003). 28 pages - exhibition booklet with color images of sculptures by this Australian artist held in 2003. Limited to 1000 copies.
Ref: 1000
Makin Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: Jeffrey Makin Genii Loci by Caroline Field & David Thomas

Publishing details: Published by Stonington Stables Museum of Art Deakin University, Australia (2002)
Ref: 1000
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: Raokin: Weaver Hawkins Survey Exhibition
by Frank Campbell & Peter Gant. Catalog for a survey exhibition of Australian artist Weaver Hawkins held in Melbourne in 1996.

Publishing details: Published by Peter Gant Fine Art, Melbourne Australia (1996). 28 pages p/b - color images.
Ref: 1009
Humphries Barryview full entry
Reference: Barry Humphries: BIG Dada Artist by Ted Gott. Tri-fold brochure on Barry Humphries dadaist art held at the ANG, Canberra in 1993. Essay by Tedd Gott

Publishing details: Published by National Gallery of Australia, Australia (1993), 6pp
Ref: 1009
Neilson (Dickie) Peterview full entry
Reference: Australian Galleries catalogue, GRISHIN, Sasha. Peter Neilson. Through the arcades, looking for trouble. Paintings 1999 – 2002.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Australian Galleries, 2002. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, 36pp. illustrated.
Ref: 33
Nixon Johnview full entry
Reference: John Nixon. EPW: Orange 1995-2001. Book containing colour images of Nixon’s modern installations artworks.
Publishing details: Tokyo: Australian Embassy, 2001. Quarto, 32pp.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Swansong by Charles Osborne - twelve Osborne poems each with corresponding Nolan black and white illustration, additional colour Nolan plate.
Publishing details: London: Shenval Press, 1968. Quarto, brown boards with black backstrip, brown endpapers, original glassine wrapper, Limited to 500 copies, of which 150 are signed by author and artist.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan by John Russell.
Publishing details: Published by the Department of Fine Art, King’s College in the University of Durham on the occasion of an exhibition in the Hatton Gallery, March 1961. Quarto, card wrappers spiral bound, 40pp. with numerous black and white illustrations and text on contrasting paper. Catalogue of 132 pages, catalogue design by Richard Hamilton.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan. January 1965. Including essays by Robert Melville and Alan Moorehead, illustrated throughout, catalogue of 43 paintings including Kelly, Antarctica and Burke and Wills series.
Publishing details: New York: Marlborough-Gersen Gallery, 1965. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, 28 pp. i
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan: Recent work May 1968. Catalogue including essay by Robert Melville, 2 colour illustrations, catalogue of 47 paintings and fold-out plate of Nolan’s three great polyptych’s of 1966 – Riverbend, Inferno and Glenrowan.
Publishing details: London: Marlborough Gallery, 1968. Quarto, illustrated wrappers with scarce Sidney Molan titled glassine wrapper, 4pp
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan. Selected works. May – June 1979. Catalogue including paintings from the Kelly series.
Publishing details: London: Marlborough Gallery, 1979. Folio, illustrated wrappers, numerous illustrations
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: The London Magazine. November 1964.Edited by Alan Ross. with a section ‘Contemporary Drawings’ dedicated to a short selection of Burke and Wills drawings by Nolan.
Publishing details: The London Magazine. November 1964. Vol. 4 No. 8. Edited by Alan Ross. Octavo, wrappers, 112pp.,
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: The Sidney Nolan Ned Kelly Paintings 1946 – 47. Exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and Design of Australia in conjunction with Qantas, in England, Europe and U.S.A. Essay by Elwyn Lynn.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Tooronga Press, n.d. [c. 1960s]. Tall narrow folio, colour wrappers, 8pp., illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan. The Sunday Times Colour Section, 6th May 1962. The Sunday Times magazine features an article on Sidney Nolan’s scenery and costumes for the Royal Ballet’s production of Stravinsky’s ‘The Rite of Spring.’ Article included images of Nolan painting designs onto costumes.
Publishing details: London: Thomson Newspapers Ltd, 1962. Folio, 27pp.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Art and Australia. Volume 5 Number 2. September 1967. Nolan Issue. Sydney: Ure Smith, 1967. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, 76pp. illustrated. The entire issue is dedicated to Nolan.
Hoff Rayner 1894-1937view full entry
Reference: Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [To be indexed fully]. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Cape Sophieview full entry
Reference: see Adrenaline Brush: Sophie Cape, Australian Story, ABC TV, 06/02/2017.

SERIES RETURN
Described as more like a “rock star” than a painter, Sophie Cape never wanted to be an artist.
A former elite athlete, she was destined for the Olympic Games in two separate sports — first as a downhill ski racer and then as a track cyclist — but her sporting career was shattered after suffering catastrophic injury and undergoing controversial “experimental” body-modification surgery intended to ease her pain and help her performance.
Left physically and psychologically traumatised, Sophie Cape then transformed herself into one of Australia’s most celebrated young artists.
It’s a profession she has long resisted, as both her mother Ann Cape and her grandmother the late Gwenna Welch are highly regarded artists.
But now Sophie Cape has no doubt about becoming the third generation artist in her family: “Art saved me.”

Story ID: 4612510
PROGRAM EXTRAS
Sophie Cape - Transcript
VIDEO Australian Story Tx Feb 6, 2017


Ross Jamesview full entry
Reference: James Ross. Paintings 1984 – 1985.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Realities. Octavo, 14pp., colour plates accompanied by text
Ref: 1000
Rubin Victorview full entry
Reference: Victor Rubin – a survey exhibition. Catalogue extensively illustrated in colour.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Metro 5 Gallery, 2002. Quarto, wrappers, 32pp.
Ref: 1000
Sandor Eveview full entry
Reference: Consider the Lilies by Stuart Cougall and Franz Holford, Wood engravings by Eva Sandor. Illustrated with original
boxwood engravings by Sandor. Limited to two hundred copies signed by the two authors and artist. ‘A fine private press exploration of the garden at Kepdowrie in Wahroonga, Sydney. It is stated in the
colophon that ‘Possessors of this book are invited to $20 the garden on the first Saturday in each November’
but we make no assurances as to the continued validity of this statement.’
Publishing details: Sydney: Ure Smith, 1953. Folio, gilt-decorated white
sheepskin parchment with edge decoration and
dentelles in gilt, 92pp.
Ref: 1009
Power H Septimusview full entry
Reference: Farewell exhibition of paintings by H. Septimus Power, R.O.I., S.A.P. foreword by J. S. MacDonald, 8pp. with two tipped-in colour plates, catalogue of 42 works
Publishing details: Melbourne: The Fine Art Society, 1923. Small quarto, wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: see People, Politics and Pop: Australians in the Sixties by Craig McGregor. Australia in the sixties. Illustrated by Martin Sharp.

Publishing details: Sydney: Ure Smith, 1968. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, 221pp.
Shepherdson Gordonview full entry
Reference: Gordon Shepherdson. Catalogue from the Gordon Shepherdson exhibition of October/November 1977. Catalogue contains an introduction on the artist and black and white photographs of the artist’s work.
Publishing details: Queensland: University of Queensland, Art Museum, 1977. Quarto, 24pp.
Ref: 1000
Sibley Andrewview full entry
Reference: KRAUSMANN, Rudi. Maps. Drawings by Andrew Sibley. Limited to 200 copies signed by poet and artist.
Publishing details: Sydney: Wild and Woolley, 2002. Folio, illustrated wrappers, 54pp. of poetry with illustrations by Sibley.
Ref: 1000
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: Smart’s Labyrinth. A portrait of the artist Jeffrey Smart. DVD, running time 57 minutes, a profile documentary on the artist.
Publishing details: Sydney: Featherstone Productions, 2000s.
Ref: 1000
Smith Ianview full entry
Reference: Ian Smith: ‘Out of Time’. Brisbane: Catalogue shows black and white images of Smith’s work with accompanying analysis written by students at Brisbane College.
Publishing details: Brisbane College of Advanced Education, 1987. Folio, 16pp.
Ref: 1000
Snape Michaelview full entry
Reference: Michael Snape. Sculpture 1985 – 1987.
Publishing details: Sydney: Mori Gallery, n.d. [c. 1988]. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, 20pp. illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: Imants Tillers. 19301. With essay by Jenny Harper. A major exhibition.
Publishing details: Wellington: National Art Gallery of New Zealand, 1989. Folio, wrappers, 16pp. illustrated,
Ref: 1000
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: Obra pictorica de Albert Tucker. With large illustration of Explorer with Parrot, biography and catalogue of 42 works. Scarce exhibition catalogue from the Australian Embassy in Mexico, text in Spanish.
Publishing details: Mexico City: Embajada de Australia, Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1969. Folio, blue printed wrappers, tri- fold brochure,
Ref: 1000
Turner Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Turner. Artist, Designer, Lithographer. Victoria Arcade, Sydney. Lithographed trade card for the Sydney artist, c. 1890s, in fine condition, printed in colours. Turner contributed drawings for the Australian Graphic and illustrated Garnet Walsh’s volume Victoria in 1880. Nineteenth century Australian artist trade cards are very rare.
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: Roland Wakelin. catalogue, list of 50 works with prices.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Toorak Art Gallery, 1968. Octavo, folding card
Ref: 1000
Warden Gillianview full entry
Reference: Cat on the Island by Gary Crew. Illustrated by Gillian Warden. Children’s story of Australian conservation theme each page a full page illustration by Warden.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Angus and Robertson, 2008. Quarto, pictorial boards, 32pp.
Ref: 1000
Watkins Dickview full entry
Reference: Dick Watkins. Features many essays and colour plates of the artist’s work.
Publishing details: Printed by Bloxham and Chambers Pty. Ltd, Sydney. Large Octavo, 56pp.
Ref: 1000
Wells S Gview full entry
Reference: Wells Cartoons. Political, sporting and general. consisting of hundreds of Wells’ newspaper cartoons.
Publishing details: Melbourne: The Herald, n.d. [c. 1920]. Quarto, colour wrappers (lightly foxed), 136pp.
Ref: 1009
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: Difficult pleasure. A film about Brett Whiteley - a profile documentary on the artist.
Publishing details: Sydney: Featherstone Productions, 2006. New DVD, running time 55 minutes,
Ref: 1000
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: The New Generation: 1964. Showcasing a modern generation of British talent including Patrick Caulfield, David Hockney, Patrick Procktor and a young Brett Whiteley, with six pages on the artist, a biography, essay, colour plate, three black and white plates and a portrait study of Whiteley in his studio.
Publishing details: The Peter Stuyvesant Foundation. London: Whitechapel Gallery, 1964. Small quarto, illustrated cards, 106pp.
Ref: 1000
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: Brett Whiteley. Paintings and Gouaches 9 – 31 March 1962. Catalogue of 31 works. An important early show
Publishing details: London: The Matthieson Gallery, 1962. Quarto, illustrated cards, 12pp., illustrated,
Ref: 1000
Scott Harriet view full entry
Reference: in The Work of Art, Australian Women Writers and Artists [’State Library of NSW exhibition brochure covering 45 Australian women writers and artists with 2 page entries on . Something Untold, Careers, Process, My Day's Work, and Support.’
Publishing details: State Library of NSW , 1996
Paterson, Esther (1892–1971)
view full entry
Reference: see ADB: Paterson, Esther (1892–1971)
by Tom Frame
This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 14, (MUP), 1996
Esther Paterson is a minor entry in this article

George Hermon Gill (1895-1973), mariner, journalist, naval officer and war historian, was born on 8 March 1895 at Fulham, London, son of William Hermon Gill, printer's compositor, and his wife Alice, née Clark. Educated in London and at Scarborough, Yorkshire, in April 1910 George went to sea as an apprentice with George Thompson & Co. Ltd's Aberdeen Line. In 1914 he obtained his second-mate's certificate and in December came to Australia in the Themistocles; on her return voyage she carried to Egypt troops of the second contingent of the Australian Imperial Force. Gill served at sea with the Aberdeen Line throughout World War I and rose to second officer; in 1921 he gained his master-mariner's certificate.
Emigrating to Melbourne in 1922, he joined the shore staff of the Commonwealth Government Line of Steamers. On 2 June 1923 he married Esther Paterson (1892-1971) with Presbyterian forms at her Middle Park home; they were to remain childless. Gill resigned his post in 1929 and took Esther on a visit to England. Back at Middle Park—where they were to spend the rest of their lives—he turned his hand to freelance journalism, specializing in sea stories and nautical matters. From October 1933 he was employed as a reporter on the Star. With Frederick Howard, in 1934 he won a prize of £250 for the film scenario they based on Howard's novel, The Emigrant. Gill's 'Walter and Hermon' series of 'breathlessly unpunctuated sketches' in the Star, and later the Argus, were popular for their 'well observed, gentle ribbing of middle-class suburbia in the 1930s'.
Gill had been appointed lieutenant in the Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve in 1927. Promoted lieutenant commander in June 1936, he was mobilized on 4 September 1939 and sent to Newcastle, New South Wales, for duty with the Examination and Naval Control services. In February 1940 he was posted to Navy Office, Melbourne. As publicity censorship liaison officer in the Naval Intelligence Division, he established cordial relations with the press. In 1943 he was appointed M.B.E. He jointly edited the series of books, H.M.A.S. (Canberra, 1942-45), took charge of the N.I.D.'s naval historical records section and in 1944 was chosen to write the naval volumes of the proposed official history of Australia in World War II. After revisiting England in 1945, he ceased full-time service on 14 November. Promoted commander in June 1947, he was transferred to the Retired List in 1953.
In 1947 Gill had become editor of the journal, Navy. From the early 1950s he edited the South Melbourne Record, an independent suburban weekly. He also wrote Three Decades (1949), a history of the State Electricity Commission of Victoria. Meanwhile, he worked on his volumes of the official history and, as G. Hermon Gill, published Royal Australian Navy 1939-1942 and Royal Australian Navy 1942-1945 (Canberra, 1957, 1968). The books were favourably reviewed, and he was praised for the balance and clarity of his narrative which set detailed descriptions of the R.A.N.'s operations against the wider backdrop of the war. Since 1981 Michael Montgomery and members of the Sydney Research Group have used circumstantial evidence to challenge Gill's account (in his first volume) of the loss of the cruiser, H.M.A.S. Sydney, but their criticisms have not overturned his general conclusions.
Five ft 9½ ins (177 cm) tall and of medium build, Gill had fair, curly hair and a florid complexion. As a historian, he was meticulous and avoided pedantry. Nor did he stand on formality. He was highly regarded in naval circles for his knowledge of the R.A.N., and his friends appreciated his kindly demeanour and the warmth of his personality. He died on 27 February 1973 in East Melbourne and was cremated with Anglican rites.
Esther Paterson was born on 5 February 1892 at Carlton, Melbourne, second child of Scottish-born parents Hugh Paterson, artist, and his wife Elizabeth Leslie, née Deans; the artist John Ford Paterson was Esther's uncle and the dramatist Louis Esson her cousin. She was educated at Oberwyl school, St Kilda, and studied painting at the National Gallery of Victoria school in 1907-12. Best known for her street-scenes and landscapes, she found further avenues for her talents in commercial art, book-illustrating and cartooning. Her portraits of uniformed and civilian officers, including Rear Admiral (Sir) Victor Crutchley and Commodore (Sir) John Collins, were reproduced in the H.M.A.S. series and in magazines, and have been shown at the Australian War Memorial, Canberra. The National Gallery of Victoria and the Geelong Art Gallery hold some of her work.
Paterson was a council-member (1954-68) of the Victorian Artists Society, a fellow (1949) of the Royal Society of Arts, London, and president (1966) of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors. She died on 8 August 1971 at Middle Park and was cremated with Anglican rites. Her younger sister Elizabeth (Betty) Deans Paterson (1894-1970) was also an artist, cartoonist and book-illustrator.

Gill Esther (1892-1971) see Paterson Estherview full entry
Reference:
Paterson Esther (1892–1971)
view full entry
Reference: Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’] [’Born into a Scottish family of semi-bohemian artists in Melbourne, Esther Paterson was a child art prodigy, & worked in both the commercial art & pure art worlds. She held her first exhibition in 1912.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
McCubbin Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
McInnes William Beckwithview full entry
Reference: see Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
Paterson family of artistsview full entry
Reference: see Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
Paterson John Fordview full entry
Reference: see Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
Hall Bernardview full entry
Reference: see Wielding the Brush: Esther Paterson - A Lifetime of Australian Art by Gae Anderson. [’This book recuperates for art historians and the reading public the distinguished but forgotten career of the Melbourne artist, Esther Paterson. Aside from providing a close-up of Esther's oeuvre - sketches for newspapers and magazines, landscape painting and portraiture - the book illuminates her close association with her family, in particular her husband George Gill and her sister Betty Paterson, also an artist. Esther began classes at the National Gallery Art School (NGAS) under the tutelage of drawing master Fred McCubbin, and painting master Bernard Hall. She graduated in 1912. Her first major solo exhibition at Melbourne's Besant Hall in 1915 drew critical acclaim from Punch magazine and the Argus, The Age and Herald newspapers. Aussie Girls, Esther's book of watercolour sketches, published at the end of 1918, was an immediate success for its witty expose of the new and permissive woman. Prime Minister William 'Billy' Hughes, a family friend, opened Esther and Betty's joint exhibition at the Queen's Hall on Saturday 1 July 1922. But it failed to gain the critical response Esther received from her previous solo show. William McInnes, an Archibald Prize winner, invited Esther, a former NGAS classmate, to be one of his four sitters for the 1926 Archibald Prize. Of the sixty works submitted, McInnes won with Esther's portrait titled 'Silk and lace'. Basking in the glory of McInnes' win, Esther invited the distinguished lawyer, Sir Randolph Garran, to open her second solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Elizabeth Street the following year. In 1938 Esther entered Sydney's Archibald Prize with a portrait of her sister Betty titled The Yellow Gloves. She didn't win, but Howard Hinton purchased the arresting portrait for his collection at the Armidale Teachers' College gallery, now the New England Regional Art Museum (NERAM). In 1950 the Royal Society of Arts elected Esther a fellow of their Society (FRSA). Cheered by the honour she entered a portrait of the author Douglas Gillison in the Archibald. When William Dargie won it for the sixth time, she decided to take her final bow. Elected to the Council of the VAS, she received honorary life membership in 1962, and resigned on 8 May 1968. At a meeting of the MSWPS held in April 1964, the Society made her an honorary life member in recognition of her contribution to the Society since she joined in 1925.’]
Publishing details: Allambie Press, 2016, pb, 201pp with index.
Scott Harriet & Helenaview full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald article (a cover surround) titled ‘Sisters Captured Rare Beauty in Science’ by Elissa Blake, 16 colour illustrations and essay.
Publishing details: SMH, 18-19, February 2017, 4pp.
Ref: 136

Henson Billview full entry
Reference: The Bill Henson Bubble’ by Melissa Swift, photographs by Bill Henson, Good Weekend article in Sydney Morning Herald, 12.2.17. pages 17-20
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, 12.2.17. pages 17-20
Ref: 21
Hudspeth Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine February, 2017, vol 39, no 1. article by Robert Stevens: Elizabeth Hudspeth, an artist in Van Diemen’s Land. Pages 10-17. 28 illustrations.
Australian Agricultural Societies - medalsview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine February, 2017, vol 39, no 1. article by Leslie J. Carlisle: Australian Agricultural Societies and their Medals, pages 6-8, 12 illustrations
Mackinlay Miguelview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine February, 2017, vol 39, no 1. article by Dorothy Erickson, ‘Michael Mackinlay in the Great War, pages 28-36. with 30 illustrations.
Baird Johnview full entry
Reference: Running and Windward, exhibition invite, Arthouse Gallery, 2017, with brief essay and one illustration.
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2017, , 2pp
Ref: 223
Travis Peter 1927-2016view full entry
Reference: Speedo designer made an arresting development, SMH Obituary
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, 21 December, 2016, p32
Ref: 223
McCord Jonathonview full entry
Reference: Neoarchaic - catalogue
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2017, with price list,
Ref: 223
Dean Tamaraview full entry
Reference: Instinctual, catalogue, Martin Browne Contemporary, 21 works illustrated, with biographical information.
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2017, with price list.and invite inserted.
Ref: 221
Collins Albertview full entry
Reference: A travel poster by Collins showing a spectacular aerial view of Sydney Harbour at Poster Auctions International Inc, March 12, 2017, New York, NY, USA. The auctioneer described it thus:
Estimate: $1,700 - $2,000
Description: Artist: ALBERT COLLINS Size: 24 1/2 x 39 3/8 in./62.2 x 100 cm The Moore Young Litho Co., Melbourne You will stare wide-eyed at this poster for a long time, searching in vain to see what is not there: the Sydney Harbour Bridge; the Sydney Opera House. This extraordinary time-capsule of a travel poster captures Sydney's harbour in 1930, two full years before the Harbour Bridge was constructed. That's why the view, here, doesn't even capture the Bridge's future location. Our vantage point is from an aeroplane swooping above The Rocks. At bottom left, Observatory Hill Park; then, on a diagonal up and right, Sydney Cove, and the future location of the famous Opera House, with the Botanical Gardens lying to the right. Above, a biplane, and below, steamships streaming into the harbor. (Australia)
Condition Report: B+/ Restored tear at bottom paper edge.
Dimensions: 24 1/2 x 39 3/8 in./62.2 x 100 cm
Artist or Maker: ALBERT COLLINS
Medium: Poster
Date: 1930
Wei Guanview full entry
Reference: Reflection, Martin Browne Contemporary catalogue, 26 works listed and illustrated
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary , 2017, pb, 26pp, price list inserted,
Ref: 223
Fraser Leahview full entry
Reference: Exhibition invite with brief essay about the artist
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2017, card
Ref: 223
Somerville Alanview full entry
Reference: Produced statue of a standing soldier titled ‘Lest We Forget’ in an edition of 500 in 2001?
Otton Malcolmview full entry
Reference: Titles at auction include:

Fred Clark's Block, 1990
Oil on board, 50 x 74 cm, Est: $80-150, Davidson Auctions, Estate & Collector, Sydney, 21/02/2016, Lot No. 178
A$60 A$71
Woodcutter's Camp, 1991
Oil on canvas, 54 x 75 cm, Est: $100-200, Davidson Auctions, Estate & Collector, Sydney, 21/02/2016, Lot No. 178A
A$160 A$189

Washing Day, 1992
Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, signed and dated lower right: Otton '92, 77 x 92 cm, Est: $400-600, Artemis Auctions, Australian & International Art, Melbourne, 27/04/2009, Lot No. 512
A$500 A$600

Le Clocharde, Place Beaubourg
Oil on board, signed and dated 1989 lower right, bears artist's name title and dated 1989 on label on the reverse, 47.5 x 61 cm, Est: $200-400, Sotheby's, Fine Australian and European Paintings, Melbourne, 26/04/1999, Lot No. 387
A$200 A$230
Otton Malcolmview full entry
Reference: Notes to a work by James Cant in the Powerhouse Museum include:

In artist's and family possession until transferred to vendor, Mr Malcolm Otton, long time friend of James Cant and Dora Chapman.

Proposed textile designs only, never produced. Textile design, based on Australian Aboriginal art, wax crayon / wash / paper, James Cant [designer], Australia, 1946-1948

Textile design featuring abstract shield and clap stick design in ochre, brown, black and white, loosely based on designs/patterns found on Australian Aboriginal ceremonial objects, inscribed 'FD5 J. CANT' (Dora Chapman's indexing system for her husband, James Cant's, collection), gouache and wax crayon on thin paper.

Otton Malcolmview full entry
Reference: see James Cant & Dora Chapman, by Jean Campbell with an introduction by Ron Radford and a memoir by Malcolm Otton.
Publishing details: Beagle Press, Sydney,1995
hardcover, dw, 160 pages, 150 colour plates, as well as black & white and colour photos.
Hawkins Sheilaview full entry
Reference: Black Tuppenny by Margaret Brown’ illustrations by Sheila Hawkins, original pictorial boards.
Publishing details: ([London, c. 1932],
Ref: 1000
Durack Elizabeth 1915-2000view full entry
Reference: Elizabeth (1915-2000) & Mary Durack (1913-94).  Picaninnies. Illustrations by Elizabeth Durack. Original pictorial wrappers.
Publishing details: [Perth (Australia): no publisher, c. 1940]. Oblong 4to.
Ref: 1000
Basing Charles E (1865-1933)view full entry
Reference: Charles Basing was an American artist active in New York City and Provincetown, Massachusetts, in the early 20th century.[1] In 1900-1903 he studied at the Academie Julien in Paris with William-Adolph Bouguereau,[2] and in 1911 he became a member of the Salmagundi Club.[3] Many of Basing's easel paintings depict the environs of New York City, and he also painted From Wikipedia: murals including the ceiling mural depicting the zodiac at Grand Central Terminal.[4] Basing died of blood poisoning in Morocco after a camel stepped on his foot.[5]
Basing Charles E (1865 -1933)view full entry
Reference: Biography   Charles Basing
A painter and muralist born in Australia, Charles Basing had studios in New York City and Provincetown, Massachusetts. His murals are at Columbia University, Carnegie Institute, and the ceiling of Grand Central Station in New York.

He died from blood poisoning after a camel stepped on his foot.

Source: Who Was Who in American Art by Peter Falk
Hardy Normanview full entry
Reference: Wilkinson, Frank Australia at the Front - A Colonial View of the Boer War. 20 illustrations by Norman Hardy from sketches and photographs by the author,
Publishing details: Original coloured pictorial cloth covered boards with black titling on the spine and the upper board. xi prelims, 286 pages, large folding map at the end of the text followed by 14 pages of the publisher's advertisements.
Ref: 1000
Shipley H Pview full entry
Reference: Gowans auction 4 March 2017 lot PR092 had naive OIL PAINTING OLD MILL NEW TOWN signed H P Shipley (?)
Marant-Boissauveur Felixview full entry
Reference: French sailor artist. The SLNSW holds three albums of pencil and watercolour drawings by this artist. More works by the artist were discovered in 2016 (?) in Brittany. See article in SL State Library Magazine, Autumns 2017, pp 16-19, by Anna Corkhill
Ref: 135
Marant-Boissauveur Felixview full entry
Reference: see Bulletin de la Societe des Etudes Oceaniennes, September, 1977. Article by by PatrickO’Reilly.
Campbell Johnview full entry
Reference: See article in SL State Library Magazine, Autumns 2017, pp 124-29, by Margot Riley on Lynnwood House, Guilford with watercolour of the house by Campbell.
Outhwaite Ida Rentoulview full entry
Reference: See article in SL State Library Magazine, Autumns 2017, pp 36-39, article by Srah Morley on new acquisition. Includes 8 illustrations.
Rae Davidview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for notes by Jude Rae daughter od David) titled Station Blacks in the Art Gallery of NSW..
Smith Sydney Ureview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article by Helen Campbell on new acquisitions of works by Ure Smith. pp 30-31, 2 illustrations.
Hookey Gordonview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article by Cara Pinchbeck on ‘Our Lands’ exhibition, pp 36-40.
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article (interview) by Deborah Edwards, p42-48
Floyd Emilyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article. P 60-66
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article. P 68-70 by Joyce Morgan
Robinson Samantha ceramicist view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, March-April, 2017, for article. P 75-6 by Joyce Morgan
[Aboriginal art] view full entry
Reference: see Spirit Country by Jennifer Isaacs. Contemporary Australian Aboriginal Art. ‘Explores the vibrant contemporary Aboriginal art of northern and central Australia.’
Publishing details: Melb. Hardie Grant Books. 2002. (2nd imp) Folio. Col.Ill.wrapps. 240pp. Profusely illustrated, mostly in
colour. Very good copy.
Court Sibellaview full entry
Reference: THE STYLIST’S GUIDE TO NYC, by Sibella Court.. ‘Sibella Court worked in New York as an interior stylist for 10 years for leading American magazines and brands. This is her like her published address book to her favourite places in NYC.’
Publishing details: Millers Point. Murdoch Books. 2011. 8vo. Col.ill.& embossed bds. With elastic closure ribbon. 285pp. Profusely illustrated in colour. With a fold- out map in end-paper pouch. Very good copy. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Counihan Noelview full entry
Reference: Proletariat : organ of the Melbourne University Labour Club. Volume 1, number 2. SAWER, Geoffrey, editor; COUNIHAN, Noel (1913-1986), artist
From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, March, 2017:

‘A striking and extremely early example of the work of Melbourne social realist artist and political activist Noel Counihan, a member of the Communist Party of Australia from 1931 until his death in 1986. Robert Smith (Noel Counihan Prints 1931-1981. A catalogue raisonné) notes that Counihan made his first two linocuts (Smith 1-2) in 1931 with tools supplied by Eric Thake. They were printed at James Flett’s press. His next recognised work is the two-colour linocut designed for the cover of the second issue of the Melbourne University Labour Club magazine Proletariat (Smith, 3). According to Smith, Counihan began using the pseudonym Noel Cunningham in 1932 to "avoid victimisation in employment because of his political activities", and extended his use of it to his art works (Smith, ibid., p.22).
The National Gallery of Australia holds a copy of this issue of Proletariat (NGA 00.250), a fact which underlines the significance of the linocut as one of Counihan's earliest known works.’ 
Publishing details: Melbourne : Melbourne University Labour Club, July 1932. . printed in colour inks, from two blocks (black and red); 28 pp, photo illustration; an exceptionally fine copy. Smith, 3.Quarto, original wrappers with linocut illustration by Noel Counihan under the pseudonym 'N. Cunningham'
Ref: 1000
White Samuel Albertview full entry
Reference: From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, March, 2017: Photographs of the Everard and Musgrave Ranges Expedition, South Australia, June-September 1914
WHITE, Samuel Albert (1870-1954)
# 15012
A highly important record of early European contact with the Yankunytjatjara people.
Eight gelatin silver print photographs, each 100 x 127 mm, unmounted; versos with the photographer's pencilled captions and sequence numbers; all of the prints are in fine condition.
Although principally an ornithologist, by the early 1900s Adelaide-born Samuel White 'had earned a reputation as Australia's pre-eminent field naturalist ... During the years 1906 until 1922 he completed six major expeditions into Central Australia and a number of shorter trips.' (Jones, Philip. Images of the Interior: Seven Central Australian Photographers. Adelaide : South Australian Museum, 2011, p.30). The expedition to the Everard and Musgrave Ranges in June-September 1914 was undertaken in conjunction with the South Australian Government's geological expedition to the far north-west of South Australia. White was invited to accompany it as naturalist and 'to make observations on Aboriginal life and customs. This was to be one of the last Australian exploring expeditions in the nineteenth-century tradition. The party of six Europeans and two Aboriginal guides set out from the Oodnadatta railhead with sixteen camels on 28 June 1914. They travelled north-west into the unexplored Musgrave and Everard Ranges, making observations and collecting natural history specimens.' (ibid. p.33)
The photographs of the Yankunytjatjara people of the Everard Ranges taken by White created much scientific interest, as the only previous contact the Yankunytjatjara had had with Europeans was during the brief encounter with members of the Elder Exploring Expedition in 1891-92. The prints were sent to renowned anthropologist A.C. Haddon at Cambridge, and White's essay on the Yankunytjatjara, accompanied by four of the photographs, was published in the journal Man in 1921. White also published his own memoir of the expedition, In the far north-west : an expedition to the Musgrave and Everard Ranges (Adelaide, 1916).
White's pencilled captions on the verso of each photograph are as follows:
9a. Everard natives in camp
9b. Aborig. who accompanied on exp. thro the Ev. Ranges
10a. Aborig. of E.R. throwing spear
11a. A young Everard man
13a. Middle-aged woman of the Everard.
14a. Young woman with child
14b. Nursing the first child
16a. A Musgrave native home. Native shelter in the Mulga scrub
Ref: 1000
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: Owlswood. John Olsen’s studio, NSW, 1999 - 2011
OLSEN, John; McGREGOR, Ken
From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, March, 2017, catalogue no. 13214
extensively illustrated, with a photograph of John Olsen signed by the artist tipped-in and an original sugarlift etching 'The Chase', limited to 20 signed copies, bound in. A photographic documentation of artist John Olsen at home and in his studio in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. Published in a very limited edition of 20 copies with an original etching prepared just for this book.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Badger Editions, 2015. Folio, hand bound by David Poole in blind-lettered cloth, pp. 32,
Ref: 1000
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: Hidden Lake. John Olsen’s studio, NSW, 2011 - 2015
OLSEN, John; McGREGOR, Ken
From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, March, 2017 catalogue no. 13213
A photographic documentation of artist John Olsen at home and in his studio in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. Published in a very limited edition of 20 copies with an original etching prepared just for this book.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Badger Editions, 2015. Folio, hand bound by David Poole in blind-lettered cloth, pp. 48, extensively illustrated, with a photograph of John Olsen signed by the artist tipped-in and an original sugarlift etching 'Windy Day', limited to 20 signed copies, bound in.
Ref: 1000
Coburn Johnview full entry
Reference: John Coburn (1925-2006) paintings, works on paper and graphics 1959-2003


Publishing details: Sydney : Eva Breuer Art Dealer, 2008. Square octavo, pictorial wrappers, pp 60. All works exhibited reproduced in full colour.
Ref: 1000
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: John Olsen : figures and landscapes. Introduction by Hendrick Kolenburg.
Publishing details: Sydney : Tim Olsen Gallery, 2002. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, trifold card. With colour reproductions and
Ref: 1000
Rogers Andrewview full entry
Reference: Andrew Rogers : forms

The first of Rogers' monographs showing a wide selection of the artist's sculptures and geoglyphs juxtaposed witht the naked female form. Fully illustrated in colour.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Andrew Rogers, 2005. Quarto, embossed cloth covered boards, with partial illustrated dust jacket.
Ref: 1000
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman : works from 1952 - 1990


Publishing details: Melbourne : Savill Galleries, 2002. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, trifold card. Includes copy of price list
Ref: 1000
Barnes Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Barnes


Publishing details: Brisbane : Philip Bacon Galleries, 1999. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, trifold brochure. Introduction by Hendrick Kolenburg and includes price list
Ref: 1000
Clayden Jamesview full entry
Reference: James Clayden
Publishing details: Melbourne : Deutscher Brunswick Street, 1990. Quarto, trifold card, illustrated wrappers. Introduction by Barry Hill. Accompanied by price list with some annotations in ink
Ref: 1000
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: Recent paintings by John Brack, Wednesday 1st - Friday 17th September 1971, contains essay on Brack and his work written by Gordon Thomson (then Deputy Director, National Gallery of Victoria), catalogue of 20 works media and dimensions, short biography on Brack,
Publishing details: Joseph Brown Gallery. Melbourne : Joseph Brown Gallery, 1971. Quarto, self covers (a little marked and foxed), pp. 8, large black & white reproduction of Brack's 'The Pink Carpet' on cover, two further black & white reproductions of the artist's work is illustrated,
Ref: 1000
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: Ian Fairweather, Emily Kame Kngwarreye : January 31-February 18, 1995


Publishing details: Melbourne : Niagara, 1995. Small quarto, wrappers, 16pp, illustrated in colour. Features introduction by William Nuttall. Price list loosely enclosed
Ref: 1000
Kngwarreye Emily Kameview full entry
Reference: see Ian Fairweather, Emily Kame Kngwarreye : January 31-February 18, 1995


Publishing details: Melbourne : Niagara, 1995. Small quarto, wrappers, 16pp, illustrated in colour. Features introduction by William Nuttall. Price list loosely enclosed
William G Hview full entry
Reference: G H Williams by Ivor Francis, see Ivor’s Art Review, edition and date unknown, but produced monthly 1956-1960

William G Hview full entry
Reference: see Max Harris, ‘George Williams’, Ern Malley’s Journal Vol 1 No 2 March 1953

William G Hview full entry
Reference: see Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery, Raw and Compelling. 2004
Tipper Alfred Henryview full entry
Reference: From Wikipedia: Alfred Henry Tipper (12 July 1867 – 2 April 1944), also known by the pseudonyms Professor Tipper and H.D. (reported to be an initialism for Henry Dearing or Harold Deering), was an Australian showman, competitive and endurance cyclist, and outsider artist. His combined interests in mechanics, fitness and entertainment led to a long career as a trick cyclist and builder of miniature bicycles. Following his death, Tipper's artistic abilities were recognised by the Australian painter Albert Tucker, who promoted Tipper's paintings in the modernist art and literary magazine Angry Penguins.

Tipper was born on 12 July 1867 in the regional Victorian city of Sale to Thomas Tipper and his Irish-born wife Catherine. When he was two years old, Tipper was abandoned by his parents and raised as a ward of the state.[1] In 1874, the Maitland Mercury reported Tipper as living in the harbourside Sydney suburb of Woolloomooloo; the young boy received attention in the press after discovering the body of a dead infant in a Belmore park.[2] Later, he found employment at a dairy farm and developed considerable knowledge of mechanics, and in the 1880s took to the new sport of competitive cycling.[1]
In 1896, Tipper rode on a penny-farthing from Sydney to Melbourne (roughly 900 km), carrying with him a 32 kg swag.[1] This inspired him to ride around the world, and over the next six years Tipper took his "singing and comedy cycling act" to crowds across Britain and the United States. One routine involved him riding a custom-built 13 cm-high bicycle while singing the folk song "From the Highlands and the Lowlands".[1] By the 1930s, Tipper was part-owner of a bicycle repair shop in Richmond, Melbourne, and toured Australia regularly with his large collection of bikes. Known by his nickname "Professor Tipper", he sported a long white beard and advocated for a "rational" dress sense of thin shirts and knickerbockers.[1] He also attempted to build a pedal-powered aeroplane.[1] Tipper lived his final years in squalor on a vacant allotment opposite Brunswick Town Hall, where he erected a makeshift shelter from the body of an old motorcar.[1][3] Despite these hardships, his passion for cycling and "unique capacity for self-advertising" remained undimmed. He died on 2 April 1944 at Royal Melbourne Hospital and was buried in Fawkner Cemetery.[1]

Tipper produced several postcards and oil paintings documenting his cycling achievements.[1] After he died, five of his paintings were salvaged and displayed in the window of a bicycle shop on Swanston Street. They were spotted by the young Melbourne modernist painter Albert Tucker, who greatly admired the works' naïve boldness, painterly qualities, and unique treatment of the Australian countryside. Tucker acquired one of the large unframed canvases (signed "H.D.") and pinned it up in his East Melbourne terrace house. In the December 1944 issue of Angry Penguins, Tucker wrote that H.D.'s paintings bore "the unmistakable mark of the natural artist ... a startling sense of life expressed through an unfaltering sense of form, pattern, texture and colour, with the anecdotal eye of the traditional "primitive"".[4] Tucker, a self-taught artist (like other Angry Penguins members such as Sidney Nolan and John Perceval), saw H.D. as an example of an artist who hadn't the "disadvantage of training in some socially endorsed art style".[4]
Only after the publication of H.D.'s work in Angry Penguins and inclusion in group exhibitions run by the Contemporary Art Society was the artist's true identity discovered.[5] Tipper's paintings are now held in major galleries including the National Gallery of Australia and Heide Museum of Modern Art,[6] and his art formed part of the 2005 touring exhibition Raw and Compelling: Australian Naïve Art.[7]
Dearing Henry or Harold Deeringview full entry
Reference: see Tipper Alfred Henry
Stewart Eric Lview full entry
Reference: Eric Stewart worked as a nightwatchman for the PMG Department. He learnt to paint during a stay in hospital for tuberculosis. Some of Stewart's paintings were discovered by Clifton Pugh in a junk shop in Echuca, Victoria in 1970-1 just before he dies in 1972. More were found later and he was subsequently recognised as a 'primitive painter' of great talent. An exhibition was held at Powell Street Gallery, Melbourne in 1972 and many notable Melbourne artists bought works.
Tipper Professorview full entry
Reference: see Tipper Alfred Henry
Light Col Williamview full entry
Reference: The Journal of Colonel William Light and a Biographical Sketch. [Two essays in the supplement]. Royal Geographical Society of Australasia Volume 11. Adelaide 1911
Publishing details: Adelaide 1911
Ref: 1000
Walch & Sonsview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian Views.
Publishing details: Hobart J. Walch & Sons (around 1900)
Ref: 1000
Given Scottview full entry
Reference: Artist was painting watercourrs around Mosman Bay c1906. See lot 76 Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, ‘Mosman Bay’ Watercolour. Signed and dated 4/06. 15 x 24cm.
Tirswell Thomasview full entry
Reference: Artist was painting watercours around Cremorne. See Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, ‘Club House, Cremorne’ Watercolour. Signed lower right. 18.5 x 31cm.
Knibbe F Iview full entry
Reference: Artist was painting around Mosman Bay. See Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, ‘Mosman Bay’ Oil on canvas, signed lower left. 29 x 44.5cm.
Wilson W Gview full entry
Reference: Artist was painting around Mosman Bay c1906. See Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, ‘Mosman Bay’ Oil on canvas. Initialled lower right. (label verso) 24 x 39cm.
Zanalisview full entry
Reference: Artist was painting around Mosman Bay . See Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017,‘Mosman Bay’ Oil on canvas. Signed lower left. 59 x 65cm.
Watts Johnview full entry
Reference: See lot 188 Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017,JOHN WATTS, ‘New Holland Cassowary’ Colour engraving, P.Mazell (eng). 22 x 17cm
Atcherley H M L (1863-1901)view full entry
Reference: See lot 188 Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas lot 219, THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, (1863-1901), ‘View From Double Bay’ Watercolour. Titled lower centre. Signed lower right. 7.5 x 15cm.
Drinkwater F Charlesview full entry
Reference: See lot 188 Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas lot 372, THE JOHN HOUSTONE COLLECTION, 7 march 2017, F.CHARLES DRINKWATER, ‘Dawe’s Point from Fort Macquarie’ oil on canvas. Signed and dated lower right 1867. 36.5 x 49.5cm. (labels verso). Reference to the artist iin back: see see Sydney Morning Herald 8 May 1868.
Mathews Gregory M (1876-1949)view full entry
Reference: The Birds of Norfolk and the Lord Howe Islands and the /react-text
react-text: 530 Australasian South Polar Quadrant with additions to “The Birds of Australia”. Gregory M. Mathews (1876-1949). London: H. F. & G. Witherby, 1928. Physical Description: 1 volume. Folio (14 x 10 inches, with 13 3/4 x 9 1/2 inch plates ). 38 hand-colored and 7 monochrome plates tipped in. Uncut. Fine, in rare and original blue, grey, green printed paper wrappers. Unnumbered edition of 225 copies. Born in Australia Mathews sailed for England with his new wife in 1902, there he visited the British Museum and “conceived the idea of producing an exhaustive work on Australian birds. He met R. Bowdler Sharpe, keeper of the bird collection, who encouraged him and ‘taught him how to work’. Once started on the huge undertaking, Mathews became fanatical. Sixteen-hour days were spent in research, writing, skin and book-collecting: he bought, exchanged or obtained by hired collectors 30,000 skins and amassed some 5,000 books covering every aspect of ornithology but, ‘essentially a bibliophile’, he ‘was not really interested in the living bird’. Correspondence sped between Australia and experts all over the world. The first volume of The Birds of Australia was published in London in 1910. The twelfth and final volume appeared in 1927. Mathews’ own collection of birds forms part of the Rothschild Collections at Tring. Anker 328; Nissen IVB 605; Whittell pp.490-492; Wood p.454; Zimmer pp.419-421. Guidance: Bonhams, 2004, $1,315 GBP
[This copy at • Arader Galleries, NY, Spring 2017 Auction›Lot # 0122]
Lloyd Rees Youth Art Awardview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index
Lloyd Rees Bicentennial Youth Art Scholarshipview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index
Lane Cove Art Panelview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index
Langker Sir Erikview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Northwood Groupview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Lawrence Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Long Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Santry Johnview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Santry Marieview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Ewart Joyview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Pidgeon Willian (WEP)view full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Lawrence Bruceview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Dennis Marjoryview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Zusters Reinisview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Warren Guyview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Rooney Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Orban Desideriusview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Woodward Bob sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Santry Michael sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Artists of Lane Cove by Judy Washington. Local Studies Monograph No. 3. Forward by Lloyd Rees. Essays on 17 artists, two sculptors and on the Northwood Group, the Lane Cove Art Society and Centrehouse. Lists awards won by Lane Cove artists as well as numerous references to other artists.
Publishing details: Lane Cove Public Library, 1989, pb, 128pp, with index, references and bibliography.
Drinkwater F Charlesview full entry
Reference: from DAAO:
Also known as C. Drinkwater
Artist (Photographer)
Charles Drinkwater was a professional photographer. In 1868 he established C. Drinkwater's Chromo Gallery in Sydney. The person with the same name and surname who died at Watson Street, Wickham, near Newcastle in 1902, could be him, except that his daughter gave his occupation as 'labourer'.professional photographer and labourer(?), was working as a photographer in Smith Street, Kempsey, New South Wales, in 1867. He moved to Sydney the following year and established C. Drinkwater’s Chromo Gallery at 621 George Street South, advertising lowest prices for cartes-de-visite. In 1870 he was listed at 410 George Street. Soon afterwards he appears to have travelled around New South Wales country towns taking photographs, being noted at Wallabadah in 1874. Between 1886 and 1889 he worked at Peel Street, Tamworth, and at 69 Hunter Street, Newcastle, in 1889-90. Fifty-three of his photographs of Tamworth and surrounding districts were included in the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition, London, among the New South Wales exhibits; two frames, each containing twenty-eight photographs of Tamworth and other places ('from the Imperial Jubilee Institute’), were hung in the 1887 Adelaide Jubilee International Exhibition.
Drinkwater is listed as a photographer of 111 Hunter Street, Newcastle in 1896-97. The Charles Drinkwater who died at Watson Street, Wickham, near Newcastle, on 29 January 1902, aged eighty-three, sounds like the same person, except that his daughter, Jane Farrer, gave his occupation as 'labourer’. He had come from Oxfordshire to New South Wales with his wife Harriet, née Gascoigne, in about 1859 and they had a family of twelve children; perhaps the photographer Charles Drinkwater worked primarily as a labourer to support them.

And seeee The Mechanical Eye in Australia by Alan Davies & Peter Stanbury, OUP, 1985
Boulter Craigview full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art Auction, March 12, 2017,
Claremont, Australia

Lot 34: CRAIG BOULTER - HAMPTON BUILDINGS FREMANTLE - Oil on canvas

Estimate: AUD250 - AUD350
Description: CRAIG BOULTER
(1945-2014)
HAMPTON BUILDINGS FREMANTLE
Signed and dated (20)09 lower left
Oil on canvas
25.5 x 30.5cm
$250/350
Provenance: Provenance: Estate of Miriam Stannage
Dimensions: 25.5 x 30.5cm
Artist or Maker: CRAIG BOULTER
Medium: Oil on canvas
Aarons Anita listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Bailey Adye listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Beattie Beryl listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Blaxland Elizabeth listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Bloomfield Rita listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Brett Helen listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Broome Jean listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Conlon Elizabeth (Treasure) listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Costello Frank listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Cowdroy Victoria listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Dadswell Lyndon listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Dahlem Lucy listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Duff Alison listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Evans Ian listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Faulkner Sheila listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Fleming Enid listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Fletcher Marjorie listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Gleeson James listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Hallstrom Jean listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Haxton Elaine listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Horner Arthur listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Isles Llewellyn listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Latour Loma listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Le Gros Yvonne listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Leubli Annis listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Lynch Frank (Guy) listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Macdonald Beth listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Mallison Mavis listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Mann Nancy listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
McGrath Eileen listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
McGrath Raymond listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Morrison Joan listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Murch Arthur listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Nimmo Lorna listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Nerelle Coral listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Norton Frank listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Norton Rosaleen listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Panting Joan listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Plate Carl listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Robertshaw Freda listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Ruhr Mollie listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Savage Jean listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Smith Joshua listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Smith Treania listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Soady Mary listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Steen Otto listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Stephen Nessie (Agnes) listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Stephens Delphine listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Thornhill Dorothy listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Trafford-Walker Ralph listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Tribe Barbara listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Wallace George listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Warren Violet listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Welch Gwenna listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
White Coral listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Williams Gwyneth listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Wilmott Dulcie May listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Young Beryl listed as a student of Rayner Hoffview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
McCrae Hughview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Artists’ ballsview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Bowles William Leslieview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Carter Normanview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Dellit C Bruce architectview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Moorfield John sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Souter D Hview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Souter D Hview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Smith Sydney Ureview full entry
Reference: see Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor
Deborah Beck. Includes bibliography and list of Rayner Hoff’s students. [’In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.
After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore. 
This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today... Rayner Hoff was a talented and charismatic sculptor who established the School of Sculpture at the National Art School in 1922. An influential teacher and artist, he went on to become Head of School until 1937. He is best known for his major sculptures adorning the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park, but he also designed the original Holden lion logo, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and was considered the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia at the time. This exhibition presents a selection of his work alongside those of his colleagues and students. The project, presented in the artist’s former studio, the Rayner Hoff Project Space, NAS, accompanies the launch of a major new biography, Rayner Hoff: the life of a sculptor, by NAS lecturer and historian, Deborah Beck.’]
Publishing details: NewSouth, Paperback, 2017, 280pp, with index. Signed copy.
Moriarty Johnview full entry
Reference: From Wikipedia: In 1983 Moriarty founded the Jumbana Group in Adelaide with the Balarinji brand being the most prominent component. Moriarty is Chairman and head designer of the group.
1994 Moriarty was commissioned by Qantas to design artwork for a Boeing 747-400 aeroplane. The finished result was the "Wunala Dreaming", which was first displayed on (VH-OJB[8]), then on (VH-OEJ[9]). A second aeroplane, a Boeing 747-300, was painted in 1995 and is known as "Nalanji Dreaming" (VH-EBU[10]).[11]

Moriarty Johnview full entry
Reference: From National Museum of Australia: The spirit behind Balarinji designs: Inspiration for the founding of Balarinji Design followed the birth of the Moriarty’s first child, Tim. In 1983, John drew turtle designs and Ros printed them on Tim’s doona cover. From this initial collaboration came Balarinji, which is also Tim’s skin name from the Yanyuwa people.
From its early textile designs, Balarinji has expanded and diversified into building brand strategies and corporate identities. At the heart of the business is a philosophy of ‘the spirituality behind the design’. As John says, ‘This is something that all Australians … can relate to, so they can understand this country and feel more part of it’.
The National Museum of Australia purchased the Balarinji Art Collection of more than 300 gouache paintings from different design projects, and the Moriarty family gifted the accompanying Balarinji archive through the Cultural Gifts Program.: In 1983 Moriarty founded the Jumbana Group in Adelaide with the Balarinji brand being the most prominent component. Moriarty is Chairman and head designer of the group.
1994 Moriarty was commissioned by Qantas to design artwork for a Boeing 747-400 aeroplane. The finished result was the "Wunala Dreaming", which was first displayed on (VH-OJB[8]), then on (VH-OEJ[9]). A second aeroplane, a Boeing 747-300, was painted in 1995 and is known as "Nalanji Dreaming" (VH-EBU[10]).[11]

Balarinji designsview full entry
Reference: From National Museum of Australia: The spirit behind Balarinji designs: Inspiration for the founding of Balarinji Design followed the birth of the Moriarty’s first child, Tim. In 1983, John drew turtle designs and Ros printed them on Tim’s doona cover. From this initial collaboration came Balarinji, which is also Tim’s skin name from the Yanyuwa people.
From its early textile designs, Balarinji has expanded and diversified into building brand strategies and corporate identities. At the heart of the business is a philosophy of ‘the spirituality behind the design’. As John says, ‘This is something that all Australians … can relate to, so they can understand this country and feel more part of it’.
The National Museum of Australia purchased the Balarinji Art Collection of more than 300 gouache paintings from different design projects, and the Moriarty family gifted the accompanying Balarinji archive through the Cultural Gifts Program.: In 1983 Moriarty founded the Jumbana Group in Adelaide with the Balarinji brand being the most prominent component. Moriarty is Chairman and head designer of the group.
1994 Moriarty was commissioned by Qantas to design artwork for a Boeing 747-400 aeroplane. The finished result was the "Wunala Dreaming", which was first displayed on (VH-OJB[8]), then on (VH-OEJ[9]). A second aeroplane, a Boeing 747-300, was painted in 1995 and is known as "Nalanji Dreaming" (VH-EBU[10]).[11]

Moriarty Johnview full entry
Reference: Saltwater Fella: An Inspiring True Story of Success against All Odds by John Moriarty. [’John Moriarty, the man who put the beautiful dot-painted Qantas Wunala Dreaming jet in the sky, was taken from his mother at the age of four. He was shipped without his family's kwoledge to a children's home, entering a harsh world of orphanages and poverty. This is the story of how he rose to fame against incredible odds.’]
Publishing details: Viking Australia, 2000
285 pages.
Moriarty Rosview full entry
Reference: From 100 Women of Influence website: Ros Moriarty is managing director of Balarinji, a leading Australian strategy and design practice established in 1983, and of the not-for-profit Nangala Project. Ros is also the author of the 2010 memoir Listening to Country, and four children’s picture books.
Lodge Gillianview full entry
Reference: see *GILLIAN LODGE (BORN 1937, AUSTRALIAN) Beached fishing boats oil on canvas, signed and dated 97 lower right 59 x 59 in lot 1272A at 21 Mar 2017 10:30 at KEYS FINE ART AUCTIONEERS,
Aylsham, Norwich. (Realist in style, finely detailed).
Powditch Jamesview full entry
Reference: James Powditch, Tipping Point, Arthouse Gallery exhibition invite with brief essay about the artist and illustration illustrating 4 assemblages
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery , 2017, 2pp
Ref: 223
Coates Georgeview full entry
Reference: Biography provided by an online seller of Coates’s work. Not verified: ‘George Coates
George James Coates was born on 9 August 1869 at Emerald Hill, Melbourne.
He first studied art under William Dellit at the North Melbourne School of Design before attending evening drawing classes under Frederick McCubbin at the National Gallery School.
He soon became one of the school's best draughtsmen. His father had died when George was 8 and, unhappy at home with his stepfather, he shared various studios in the city, living for a time with Lionel Lindsay and Hugh McLean in Elizabeth Street.
Coates ran a drawing class in his Swanston Street studio where the students included Max Meldrum, Norman and Percy Lindsay, and George Bell.
In 1895-96 Coates studied painting under Bernard Hall.  He won a travelling scholarship in 1896 and went to London next year before moving to Paris, where he worked at the Académie Julian and studied under Jean Paul Laurens.
In Paris, Coates renewed an acquaintance with a fellow art student, Dora Meeson (1869-1955), who arrived in 1898.
The couple were engaged and eventually married in June 1903, some three years after their move to London.
Coates and Meeson established themselves in Chelsea where they became members of an extensive circle of Australian expatriate artists.
To earn money they contributed black and white illustrations to Dr H. S. Williams's Historians' History of the World and the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Coates had exhibited 'on the line' at the Old Salon in Paris in 1898 and continued to show there and at the Royal Academy.
Recognition did not come until after 1910, with an honourable mention at the Old Salon, prominent public notice at the 1912 Royal Academy exhibition and success at the 1913 New Salon when he was elected an associate (a member in 1927).
Numerous commissions followed and soon established him as one of London's leading portrait painters. He was a member of the Chelsea Arts Club, the International Society of Sculptors, Painters, and Gravers and the Royal Society of Portrait Painters.
Meeson had the distinction of being the first Australian woman artist elected a member of the Royal Institute of Oil Painters.
Primarily a portrait painter, his realism emphasized a harmonious range of low tones and his approach was painstaking and obsessive.
Meeson is best known for her many fine impressions of the River Thames, a number of which were acquired after 1945 by the Port of London Authority.
Coates died suddenly in London of a stroke on 27 July 1930. A memorial exhibition of his work was opened in May 1931 at the New Burlington Galleries by Lord Birdwood. His wife continued an active artistic career until her death in London on 24 March 1955. The two were buried together in Rye cemetery.’
Publishing details: London: Burlington Galleries. Small octavo, 14pp.
Allport Mary Mortonview full entry
Reference: See thesis by Felicity Berry (? university)
Powditch Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Powditch - Coast. A Retrospective
Publishing details: S H Ervin Gallery, 2017 [details to be added]
Ref: 1000
Harrison Barbara Gail view full entry
Reference: see ANDREW SMITH & SON, UK, 28 March, 2017, lot, 857: Barbara Gail Harrison (Australian) a large brown patinated bronze sculpture of a recumbent lion, signed B Harrison, cast by the Fiorini Foundry (signed Fiorini London), mounted on polished plinth granite base, executed circa 1995, 46 cm x 31 cm high Notes: We understand this cast to be limited to a maximum of seven worldwide, further examples of the artists work are held in selective private collections

Angas Charles Howard 1861-1928view full entry
Reference: From Early Medical Books, Literature, Art, Photographs and Rare Australiana
by Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers
April 6, 2017, auction lot 34: [ANGAS, Charles Howard (and others)]: A keepsake album (quarto, approximately 100 leaves, now a little worn) compiled by a young Adelaide woman, Laura Matilda Kaines (1857-1929), with her ownership details on an early blank ('Haltonbrook, Kensington, 1875'). The routine transcriptions, sketches, photographs, prosaic notes and loosely inserted cuttings by family, friends and acquaintances are enlivened by several topical watercolours mounted in the book. A pen-and-wash of a camp site on the banks of the River Murray, by an unidentified artist (118 x 178 mm, within a decorative border), is upstaged by two well-executed (no pun intended) and graphic watercolours by Charles Howard Angas (1861-1928), a grandson of George Fife Angas. His father was John Howard Angas; George French Angas was his uncle. They are signed and dated 1881, and both depict hunting dogs. The first, '"Mabel" single-handed, The Farm, March 81' (90 x 190 mm) shows a dog in hot pursuit of a rabbit; the second, '"Loo" and "Euchre", The Farm 27.12.80' (155 x 112 mm) shows two dogs in a tangle with a rabbit in between them, being savaged by the pair. What young Laura thought of it, coming as it does between large slabs of Moore and Byron, is anybody's guess ... The Farm is almost certainly Collingrove, near Angaston.

Fiveash Rosa Catherineview full entry
Reference: From Early Medical Books, Literature, Art, Photographs and Rare Australiana
by Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers
April 6, 2017, auction lot 37: BROWN, John Ednie: The Forest Flora of South Australia.

Adelaide, Government Printer, 1882 to 1890. Large folio, nine parts, each containing 5 very large-format chromolithographic plates with leaves of text; loosely inserted in the fourth part is a large printed notice from the publisher, dated 1884, apologising for the lateness of the project and noting that a reprint of the first part is already called for. Original flush-cut quarter cloth and pictorial wrappers (with some defects and blemishes); all five plates in Part 7 have a 30 mm tear to the leading margin (well clear of the printed surface); two plates in Part 8 have a very short tear to the leading margin (which is dusty on a third plate); a few other plates have trifling marginal blemishes; minor signs of use and age; overall a very good set, with the printed surfaces of all plates in fine condition.

Notes:

The following information from the Australian Dictionary of Biography's entry on the South Australian botanical artist Rosa Catherine Fiveash (1854-1938) is a potted history of the project: 'In 1882 Rosa was invited to illustrate The Forest Flora of South Australia by John Ednie Brown. Nine parts of this work, which was never completed, were published in 1882-90. Each one contained five attractive lithographs of native plants and Rosa drew 32 of the 45 published; they were drawn as specimens came to hand, in no particular botanical order'. John Ednie Brown (1848-1899) was Conservator of Forests for the Government of South Australia from 1878; in 1890 he 'accepted the position of director-general of forests in New South Wales at £800 a year, £50 more than the South Australians paid him'. Presumably Brown's departure in 1890 caused the project to be abandoned then. Ferguson 7516.
Ball Sydneyview full entry
Reference: Obituary, Sydney Morning Herald, 27.3.2017, p26, filed in Sydney Ball - The Colour Paintings 1963-2007, Penrith Regional Gallery, 2008, hc, dw, 84pp
Publishing details: SMH, 27.3.2017, filed inside Sydney Ball - The Colour Paintings 1963-2007 in Scheding library.
Ball Sydneyview full entry
Reference: Sydney Ball : modular and infinex, 1967 to now. Essay byTerence Maloon.


Published:

Publishing details: [Sydney, NSW] Sullivan+Strumpf, 2016, 106 pages : colour illustrations, portraits.
Ref: 1000
Cook Ebenezer Wake (1843-1926)view full entry
Reference: from item on Ebay March 27, 2017: Fine pencil and watercolour study of a woman by well-listed British/Australian artist Ebenezer Wake Cook (1843-1926). The drawing measures approximately 11.6 x 9cm and has further studies of a young woman in pencil on the reverse of the sheet. Although presumably also by Cook, the pencil studies on the reverse are reminiscent of the work of Pre-Raphaelite artist Charles Fairfax Murray (1849-1919). The drawing is in good condition, with a couple of pin marks at the edges, which could easily be hidden by a mount. The drawing comes with a framer's label from The Court Gallery, Surrey.

Ebenezer Wake Cook (generally referred to as E. Wake Cook), was born at Maldon, Essex, England and came to Melbourne in 1852. At 17 years of age Cook became an assistant to Nicholas Chevalier, who instructed him in painting, wood-engraving and lithography. He was one of the original members of the Victorian Academy of Arts in 1870. In 1872 Cook studied under Eugene von Guerard at the National Gallery of Victoria. In that year he won the medal for the best water-colour exhibited at the exhibition of the New South Wales Academy of Art. He was an associate of Tom Roberts, Rupert Bunny and Bertram Mackennal, and for a time worked for the Adelaide Photographic Company. In 1873 Cook went to London, and from 1875 to 1926 was a constant exhibitor at the Royal Academy. In 1904 he published a pamphlet, Anarchism in Art and Chaos in Criticism, which was followed in 1924 by Retrogression in Art and the Suicide of the Royal Academy, an attack on all un-academic painters from Manet onwards. Cook for a time was president of the Langham Sketch Club, and an original member and honorary secretary of the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists. Cook died early in 1926. His work was popular with some collectors and dealers, but it was often regarded as pretty when it was meant to be beautiful. Cook is represented in the national galleries at Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.  
Vaniman Melvinview full entry
Reference: see Dominic Winter auction, UK, 30 March, 2017, Lot 400: Australia.- Vaniman (Melvin), 4 panoramic views of Sydney and Hobart, c.1904: Estimate: £1,000 - £1,500
Description: Australia.- Vaniman (Melvin), 4 panoramic views of Sydney and Hobart, including [Sydney from the North Shore, taken from hot air balloon], 1904, silver gelatin print, c.380 x 1183mm. signed and annotated 'registered' in negative lower right; [Bennelong Point, Circular Quay and Dawes Point, from a ship's mast], silver gelatin print, c.384 x 1184mm, signed and annotated 'registered' in negative lower left, couple of short tears at foot, with slight loss to image, chipped at corners, 1904; [Hobart waterfront], silver gelatin print, 387 x 1185mm., signed and annotated 'registered' in negative lower right, chipped at corners, 1904; all are mounted on board, and another similar (4)

⁂ Vaniman was an American photographer and adventurer. He was nicknamed the 'Acrobatic photographer', as he shot images from gas balloons, ship's masts, a homemade 30 meter pole and high rise buildings. His views of Australia and New Zealand were begun in 1903 and taken as promotional images for the Oceanic Steamship Company.
Chalker Jackview full entry
Reference: see EAST BRISTOL AUCTIONS, UK, 27 March, 2017, lot, 1327: A rare Jack Chalker ( British Born 1918 ) bronze bust study of a child being raised on a large wooden plinth. Bearing notation to the base for the Royal Bath & West Show exhibit No 67

Jack Chalker, who has died aged 96, was a British artist who drew and painted the atrocities he witnessed as a prisoner of war on the Burma-Siam Railway, also known as the “Death Railway”.
Made famous by Pierre Boulle’s book (and David Lean’s film) The Bridge on the River Kwai, the railway is now a byword for war crimes. More than 12,000 Allied prisoners perished during its construction, along with at least 90,000 Asian labourers
On Chalker’s release in 1945 he joined the Australian Army HQ in Bangkok as a war artist; some of his work was used in evidence at the Tokyo war trials. On his return to England he resumed his studies, graduating from the Royal College of Art in 1951.
For more than a decade after his repatriation he could not sleep properly. Nor could he look at his drawings and paintings: it would take 40 years for him to take his works out of the box in which they were stored.
In 1950, after teaching History of Art at Cheltenham Ladies’ College he became principal of Falmouth College of Art and, in 1957, principal of West of England College of Art, where he remained until his retirement in the mid-1980

Measures: 88cms high x 122cms wide x 9cms deep.
Spence Percyview full entry
Reference: see ROSEBERYS LONDON, UK, lot 927, 29 March, 2017, Percy Frederick Seaton Spence, Australian 1868-1933- "Woolwich"; monochrome watercolour over traces of pencil on card, signed, titled and inscribed to the reverse, 37.4x54cm, (unframed) Provenance: Board of Education, South Kensington, Victoria and Albert Museum, stamped 1975, Loan Exhibition of Modern Illustration 1900, according to the label attached to the reverse of the frame
Sharp Martin view full entry
Reference: see Antikbar Original Vintage Posters, UK.auction, 22 April, 2017, lot 1602: Rare Psychedelic Art Poster - Legalise Cannabis - The Putting Together of the Heads. Speakers Corner, Hyde Park. The poster Legalise Cannabis - The Putting Together of the Heads was produced to promote a rally held in Hyde Park, London, on 16 July 1967. This was England’s Summer of Love and the rally sought legalisation of cannabis and decriminalisation of its use. The poster artwork featured an upper section of swirling psychedelic fonts and circular lines in reddish-orange inks promoting the details of the rally, whilst the middle and lower section was populated with a densely packed collage of ethnographic heads extracted from a pre-photographic edition of National Geographic. The use of heads was most likely a pun by Sharp on the term 'heads' as it applied to that part of the marijuana plant which was the most chemically potent and hallucinogenic. 'Heads' also referred to smokers and users of the drug. A Head shop was a store where drug paraphernalia, clothes, posters and related material could be purchased. The poster was not ultimately seen on the streets of London, as the billposter employed to put it up, sold all of the stock instead. Country: UK. Year: 1967. Artist: Martin Sharp. Martin Ritchie Sharp (21 January 1942 – 1 December 2013) was an Australian artist, cartoonist, songwriter and film-maker. Sharp made contributions to Australian and international culture from the early 1960s, and was called Australia's foremost pop artist. His psychedelic posters of Bob Dylan, Donovan and others, rank as classics of the genre, and his covers, cartoons and illustrations were a central feature of Oz magazine, both in Australia and in London. Martin co-wrote one of Cream's best known songs, "Tales of Brave Ulysses", created the cover art for Cream's Disraeli Gears and Wheels of Fire albums, and in the 1970s became a champion of singer Tiny Tim, and of Sydney's embattled Luna Park. Size (cm): 76x51. Good condition, creases and small tears, pinholes and minor defects in margins.
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: ACKER, Tim. & CARTY, John. (Ed). NGAANYATJARRA. Art of the lands.
‘The Ngaanyatjarra Lands occupy an area the size of Victoria. This vast inland region is home to the Yarnangu people, whose culture of arts & crafts tell the visual story of their cultural history.’
Publishing details: Crawley. UWA Publishing. 2012. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 281pp. Profusely illustrated in colour. 1st paperback ed.
Ref: 1000
Dombrovskis Peterview full entry
Reference: DOMBROVSKIS, Peter (Photos) & FLANAGAN, Richard. ON THE MOUNTAIN. Essay by Richard Flanagan. Natural History by Jamie Kirkpatrick.
Publishing details: Hobart. West Wind Press. 1996. Folio. Or.cl. Dustjacket. 144pp. Profusely illustrated in colour with Dombrovskis's splendid colour photographs. 1st ed. The very scarce hardcover edition, limited to 1,500 copies, this out of series.
Ref: 1000
Dombrovskis Peterview full entry
Reference: DOMBROVSKIS, Peter (Photographer) WILD RIVERS. Franklin, Denison, Gordon. Text by Bob Brown.
Profusely illustrated with Dombrovskis's splendid colour photographs of the spectacular unspoiled country of South-West Tasmania
Publishing details: Sandy Bay. Peter Dombrovskis. 1983. (2nd ed.) Folio. Or.canvas. Dustjacket. 128pp.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: CARUANA, Wally et al. OLD MASTERS. Australia's great bark artists. ‘Bark painting has been practiced by Aboriginal artists of Arnhem Land for millennia, & is one of the great traditions of world art. A look at 40 master painters who have carried on this traditional art.’
Publishing details: Canberra. National Museum of Aust. 2013. 4to. Col.Ill. wrapps. 240pp. Profusely illustrated
sh, plants & animals.
in colour. 1st paperback ed.
Ref: 1000
Tatting in Laceview full entry
Reference: KONIOR, Mary. TATTING IN LACE. ‘Lace tatting allows the creation of beautiful & intricate lace work without the hours required for bobbin & needle lace work. Starting with classic Victorian patterns, the technique is explained.’
Publishing details: Kenthurst. Kangaroo Press. 1988. 4to. Col.ill.bds. 120pp. b/w ills & pattern designs. Very good copy. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Birds of Preyview full entry
Reference: OLSEN, Penny & Jerry. CROME, Francis. BIRDS OF PREY & GROUND BIRDS OF AUSTRALIA. The National Photographic Index of Australian Wildlife. Illustrated with images from the photographic index of wildlife, all of the 24 species of raptors, as well as ground dwelling birds, such as quail, pheasants, Cassowaries, Emus, & brush fowl.
Publishing details: Syd. Angus & Robertson. 1993. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 200pp. Dustjacket & boards with wear & slight tearing to edges. Profusely illustrated in colour. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Sculptors in Spaceview full entry
Reference: PAGE, Michael. SCULPTORS
IN SPACE. South Australian Architects 1836 - 1986. ‘A look at the South Australian architects who created Australia's colonial heritage. Edmund Wright, Daniel Garlick, Rowland Rees, Edward Hamilton & Robert Thomas created Adelaide's splendid assemblage.’
Publishing details: Adelaide. Royal Aust Inst of Arch. 1986. 8vo. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 311pp. Lacks ffe. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Colonial Life in Tasmania - Australian photography view full entry
Reference: Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Craig and Solinview full entry
Reference: see lot 139 Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers
April 6, 2017,Malvern, Australia
Description: [Western Australia] Craig & Solin's Australasian Views - WA Series. Photographed and Published by North Fremantle Studio. A collection of 66 stereophotographs on the photographers' captioned mounts [some printed 'Freemantle']. Localities include Perth, Fremantle, and Bunbury, and the mining districts of Kalgoorlie, Boulder, Coolgardie and Kanowna. Notes: All images are captioned in the negative, and all are uniquely numbered in ink on the verso, beneath the initials CAB (a broken run from 1 to 91) by an early owner. Fifteen (mainly the mining ones) are dated 1898 in the caption, and there are several of Lord Brassey's visit to Perth (March-April 1898); the balance appear to be of a similar vintage. About 30 of them have basic handcolouring that definitely looks better through the viewer. Neither Craig, nor Solin, nor the North Fremantle Studio is recorded in Davies and Stanbury (1985), but Barrie (2002) lists Craig & Solin at 'Fremantle and Kalgoorlie 1898'. Trove lists about 40 photographs by them, all held by the State Library of WA. The substantial 1993 publication by Martyn and Audrey Webb, 'Golden Destiny. The Centenary History of Kalgoorlie-Boulder and the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia', of some 1100 quarto pages 'profusely illustrated by contemporary photographs, maps and diagrams', does not contain any images by Craig and Solin, suggesting that the material in the SLWA came into the collection after the book was published. (Offered together with seven other stereophotographs, all initialled CAB and uniquely numbered within the same run: five are in the 'Rose's Australasian Views Victorian Series' and are rubber-stamped 'Craig & Solin, Manufacturers' Agents and Importers of Cycles, Family Bibles, Books & Fancy Goods, Fremantle').
North Fremantle Studioview full entry
Reference: see lot 139 Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers
April 6, 2017,Malvern, Australia
Description: [Western Australia] Craig & Solin's Australasian Views - WA Series. Photographed and Published by North Fremantle Studio. A collection of 66 stereophotographs on the photographers' captioned mounts [some printed 'Freemantle']. Localities include Perth, Fremantle, and Bunbury, and the mining districts of Kalgoorlie, Boulder, Coolgardie and Kanowna. Notes: All images are captioned in the negative, and all are uniquely numbered in ink on the verso, beneath the initials CAB (a broken run from 1 to 91) by an early owner. Fifteen (mainly the mining ones) are dated 1898 in the caption, and there are several of Lord Brassey's visit to Perth (March-April 1898); the balance appear to be of a similar vintage. About 30 of them have basic handcolouring that definitely looks better through the viewer. Neither Craig, nor Solin, nor the North Fremantle Studio is recorded in Davies and Stanbury (1985), but Barrie (2002) lists Craig & Solin at 'Fremantle and Kalgoorlie 1898'. Trove lists about 40 photographs by them, all held by the State Library of WA. The substantial 1993 publication by Martyn and Audrey Webb, 'Golden Destiny. The Centenary History of Kalgoorlie-Boulder and the Eastern Goldfields of Western Australia', of some 1100 quarto pages 'profusely illustrated by contemporary photographs, maps and diagrams', does not contain any images by Craig and Solin, suggesting that the material in the SLWA came into the collection after the book was published. (Offered together with seven other stereophotographs, all initialled CAB and uniquely numbered within the same run: five are in the 'Rose's Australasian Views Victorian Series' and are rubber-stamped 'Craig & Solin, Manufacturers' Agents and Importers of Cycles, Family Bibles, Books & Fancy Goods, Fremantle').
Davis Henryview full entry
Reference: see see lot 127 Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers April 6, 2017,Malvern, Australia DAVIS, Henry: An album of 36 original vintage albumen paper photographs, mainly full-page plates of Adelaide and surroundings from the early 1870s. The plates are mounted on the rectos only of card leaves in a contemporary full leather album; the album is a little worn at the extremities; the first leaf is moderately foxed and marked, a few other leaves are a little foxed, and there is light scattered foxing and trifling marks to some of the other mounts, but overall the album is very presentable, with the plate content in excellent condition. Notes: The first twenty-five full-plate photographs (approximately 175 x 220 mm or the reverse) comprise eight views of substantial city buildings, three city streetscapes, five Botanic Gardens scenes, eight views in the Adelaide Hills (five of settlements, three of waterfalls), and an important image taken at St Peter's College in 1872 (see below). There are also eleven photographs (six full-plate, the others approximately 135 x 210 mm each) taken at Tarrawatta and Collingrove, the Angas family properties in the Barossa Valley. There are six of Collingrove homestead and environs, including St Faith's Church (built in 1874); well-fed cattle are the main feature of another four of them. The people shown in five of them are most probably family members, with the last image - of three young women on horseback, sitting side-saddle - particularly resonant. Henry Davis (1831/2-1878) is recorded in Davies and Stanbury's The Mechanical Eye in Australia, Joan Kerr's Dictionary of Australian Artists ... to 1870, and Robinson and Zagala's A Century in Focus: South Australian Photography, 1840s-1940s (2007). The latter notes that he was 'manager and principal photographer of the Adelaide Photographic Company from 1866, [and] became a leading views photographer in Adelaide until Samuel Sweet's domination of this field in the late 1870s [the time of Davis's death].... Apart from his album, "Views in South Australia" [in the Art Gallery of South Australia collection], which contains fifty scenic photographs, including the Botanic Gardens, rural bridges, waterfalls, gullies ... few of Davis's views are known today. Many photographs and negatives were destroyed in studio fires - firstly in 1870, and then in 1879 after his death'. We attribute this album to Davis based on examples of his work in the collections of both the State Library and the Art Gallery of South Australia. Not least, this album contains the wonderful image, 'Cricket, St Peter's College (Poonindie Batting), 1872', reproduced in Robinson and Zagala, with a full-page description (pages 84-85). The photograph is attributed to Davis thus: it was 'taken by a photographer from the Adelaide Photographic Company, probably Henry Davis, a part-owner and principal photographer of the company at that time'. A picture might be worth a thousand words, but a few words will add immensely to underlining the importance of this picture: 'The match in progress is between St Peter's College and a team of Aboriginal cricketers from Poonindie Training Institution, near Port Lincoln'. This match, in November 1872, 'marked the beginning of annual Poonindie vs St Peter's College matches, which were played alternately in Adelaide and Poonindie until at least 1876'.
Miller Lewis (official artist); view full entry
Reference: see Witness To War: Official Art & Photography 1999-2003, Robert Nichols (Ed).
‘A travelling exhibition created by the Australian War Memorial, Witness to war: official art & photography 1999-2003, brings together the work of the Memorial’s most recent official artists and photographers: Wendy Sharpe, Rick Amor, Peter Churcher and Lewis Miller (official artists); and David Dare Parker and Stephen Dupont (official photographers). It is an exhibition that reveals not only the arresting images these men and women have created, but also their own stories. Travelling to East Timor, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Solomon Islands, they crafted bodies of work that document Australia’s role in these regions and reflect their own experiences and interpretations. They are our witnesses to war. A selection of art works from the AWM's collection, relating to various major conflicts in which Australia has been involved. The focus is on Australian artists and photographers. The chapters include - continuing the tradition, conflict photography, the ADF overseas 1999-2003. Numerous color plates.’
Publishing details: Published by Australian War Memorial, Australia (2005), Soft cover. 1st Edition. 28 pages - p/b
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman: Works on Paper 1950-1990 by MIchael Fox

Publishing details: Published by Joel Fine Art, Australia, 2007
Ref: 1001
Grosse Frederickview full entry
Reference: GROSSE, Frederick, 1828-1894 (illustrator); SLATER, George (publisher)
The News Letter of Australasia; or Narrative of events: a Letter to send to friends. Number XIII. July, 1857.
Wood engraving by Frederick Grosse titled ‘View on the Yarra. – Hodgson’s Punt’, signed in the image at lower right; below the image 4 lines of letterpress describing the scene; lacking the second printed sheet; edges roughened and cover sheet with small marginal loss at bottom right; the blank sheet is lightly hinged to a backing card; very scarce. Ferguson, 13330.
The first issue of the News Letter of Australasia was published in July, 1856, and the following notice regarding this new and innovative publication appeared in The Argus, 23 June, 1856: ‘On July 2nd will be Published, No. 1, price 6d.. “THE NEWS LETTER OF AUSTRALASIA,” an Impartial Summary. “The News Letter of Australasia,” printed on superfine thin letter paper, with pages three and four blank for private correspondence. Price 6d. Sold by all booksellers and newsagents. Letters are not so liable to be lost as news-papers in transmission by post. Send to friends at home “The News Letter of Australasia,” a monthly record and bird’s eye view of the events and state of these countries. “The News Letter of Australasia” will contain a narrative without comment, most emphatically indicating and marking the spirit of progress of the times, and the natural characteristics of these countries. “The Newsletter of Australasia,” printed on superfine thin letter paper. Sold by all booksellers. Price 6d. Published by GEORGE SLATER, 94 Burke-street east.’
 

Publishing details: Melbourne : George Slater, Publisher, 94 Bourke Street East, 1857. Bifolium, 260 x 205 mm, cover sheet and [2] blank sides, printed on thin writing paper,
Ref: 1000
Muller Henry (Heinrich)view full entry
Reference: From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, April, 2017: MÜLLER, Henry (Heinrich) (attributed)
Photographic portraits of a young Aboriginal woman, Toowoomba, 1868-69
Two albumen print photographs in carte de viste format, each 103 x 65 mm (mount); no photographer’s imprint (versos blank); some mild spotting, mostly confined to the peripheries of the prints and the mounts themselves.
A pair of superb studio portraits of the same young woman, one a full length portrait of her holding a spear and a small white flower, the other a striking vignette head and shoulders portrait.
Another copy of the vignette portrait in a private collection has been attributed by Michael Aird to the photographer Heinrich (or Henry) Müller. The National Gallery of Australia gives Müller’s dates as: Germany 1810 /1830 – Australia 1877; Australia from 1853
. The only date for Müller provided by Davies & Stanbury (Mechanical Eye) is 1868, when he had a studio in Ruthven Street, Toowoomba. The pair of studio portraits we offer here undoubtedly date to the late 1860s, and so were almost certainly taken in Müller’s Ruthven Street studio. One of them possibly matches a copy print of a Müller photograph held in the John Oxley Library (Portrait of a young woman, Toowoomba, 1869), one of a small number of Aboriginal portraits by Müller in the collection, all dated to 1869 (not viewable online).

Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: Save me from the shark - A picaresque entertainment.
Publishing details: London : William Collins, 1973. Octavo, boards in illustrated dustjacket (edges worn), pp. 191.
Ref: 1000
Majzner Victorview full entry
Reference: Earth to sky. The art of Victor Majzner by Leigh Astbury.
Contents:
Part I. The Substance of the Matter 1966-1982: 1. Painting as process and paint as substance 1966-1976; 2. Explorations of a personal kind 1977-1982
Part II. Cultural Landscapes 1983-1992: 3. Cultural critiques 1983-1992; 4. Critiques of the landscape 1983-1992
Part III. Towards Identity 1993-2001: 5. Earth to sky 1993-2001
Postcript. The religious content of Victor Majzner’s recent work – Rabbi Dr. Shimon Cowen

Publishing details: Macmillan, 2002. Quarto, cloth, illustrated dustjacket, slipcase. The deluxe edition, limited to 50 copies,
Ref: 1000
Kelly Johnview full entry
Reference: John Kelly : Cow up a tree : Vache dan un abre.
Published for the erection of Kelly’s monumental ‘Cow up a tree’ bronze on Paris’ Champs Elysées. Contains coloured images of prior works and studies that inspired the work.

Publishing details: Paris : Arts d’ Australie – Stéphane Jacob; Melbourne : Niagara Galleries; London : The Piccadilly Gallery, 1999. Oblong octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp 24.
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: Arthur Boyd Revisited : Ten Year Retrospective Anniversary
Publishing details: Savill Galleries, 2003. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp 28 with one fold out page. Catalogue listing 33 items, reproduced with colour illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Hood Cherryview full entry
Reference: Cherry Hood : Brüder

Publishing details: Lehmann Lekiw + Schedler Fine Art, 2003. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp 24. Exhibition catalogue showing nine works, illustrated with full colour plates, in addition to introduction by Stephanie Barrington MVA.
Ref: 1000
Kelly Johnview full entry
Reference: John Kelly - More fucking cows!

Publishing details: Melbourne : Niagara Galleries, 2000. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, [pp 24]. All works displayed reproduced in full colour.
Ref: 1000
Gwion Gwionview full entry
Reference: Gwion Gwion : Secret and sacred pathways of the Ngarinyin Aboriginal people of Australia.
Monograph exploring the cave and rock paintings of Northern Australia, thought to be some of the oldest figurative artwork in existance. Text in English, German, and French.
Publishing details: Kol, Germany : Konemann, 2000.  Quarto, orange cloth boards with pictorial dustjacket, pp 336.
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: Arthur Boyd : Brides, Lovers, Myths, Landscapes - Selected Paintings 1950s-1970s.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Deutscher Fine Art, 1996. Octavo, illustrated cover, trifold card. Exhibition invitation with seven works illustrated in full colour.
Ref: 1000
Charles Blackmanview full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman : The Schoolgirl Years (1951-1953)

Publishing details: Melbourne : Tolarno Galleries, 1988. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, bifold card, minor ink annotations. Exhibition invitation and catalogue.
Ref: 1000
Moffatt Tracyview full entry
Reference: Tracy Moffatt : Free-falling
Art monograph of one of Moffatt’s early solo museum exhibitions, with three essays and colour reproductions throughout.
Publishing details: New York : Dia Center for the Arts, 1998. Oblong octavo, pictorial gold wrappers, pp 60.
Ref: 1000
Yandell Christian (Waller)view full entry
Reference: Australian Fairy Tales by Hume Cook with (tipped in colour) illustrations by Christian Yandell.
Publishing details: Melbourne Howlett 1925 Small quarto
Ref: 1000
Dennys Joyceview full entry
Reference: Bushland Stories by Amy Eleanor Mack with 47 Illustrations by Joyce Dennys (eight are full page colour)
Publishing details: Sydney Angus & Robertson. No date but probably 1921
Ref: 1000
Across The Yearsview full entry
Reference: Across The Years The Lure of Early Australian Books Edited by Charles Barrett. Essays by Charles Barrett, James R Tyrrell (On bookselling), R H Croll ( On Bookplates), E Morris Miller (On Tasmani
Publishing details: Melbourne N H Seward 1948 First edition.
Ref: 1009
Australian Book-Platesview full entry
Reference: Australian Book-Plates and Book-Plates of Interest to Australia. [’extensively illustrated with bookplates, some of which are original graphics tipped-in; ‘magnificent showcase of Australian bookplates. Artists include Norman Lindsay, Adrian Feint, Alan Jordan, G. D. Perrottet, and Lionel Lindsay, among many others.’
‘]
Publishing details: Sydney Privately Printed 1950. Quarto Original two toned cloth in dustwrapper, standard edition of 200 copies signed by Barnett.
Ref: 1000
Scuptors Society Theview full entry
Reference: catalogue 2017 exhibition. Lists website at www.sculptorssociety.com and approximately 50 exhibitors. Founded in 1951. Refers to ‘members of renown such as Robert Woodward, Robert Klippel, Lyndon Dadswell, Clement Meadmore, Gerald Lewers, Margo Lewers, Tom Bass, Bert Flugelman, Amlan Somerville, Alex Kolozsy, Larissa Smagarinsky, Terrance Plowright and Blaze Krstanoski.
Ref: 223
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: Martin Sharp - His Life and Times by Joyce Morgan. [’The life of the charismatic, unconventional, unique and surprising Martin Sharp - pop artist and joint founder of the underground magazine Oz
'Martin wore tight pants that were striped red, white and blue, like a Union Jack, and an embroidered Afghan vest. In front of his face he carried, like a lollipop, a smile on a stick. As he went, he bowed to passers-by. Even on King's Road, he stood out.'

Martin Sharp's art was as singular as his style. He blurred the boundaries of high art and low with images of Dylan, Hendrix and naked flower children that defined an era. Along the way the irreverent Australian was charged with obscenity and collaborated with Eric Clapton as he drew rock stars and reprobates into his world.

In this richly told and beautifully written biography, Joyce Morgan captures the loneliness of a privileged childhood, the heady days of the underground magazine Oz as well as the exuberant creativity of Swinging London and beyond.

Sharp pursued his quixotic dream to realise van Gogh's Yellow House in Australia. He obsessively championed eccentric singer Tiny Tim and was haunted by Sydney's Luna Park. Charismatic and paradoxical, he became a recluse whose phone never stopped ringing.

There was no one like Martin Sharp. When he died, he was described as a stranger in a strange land who left behind a trail of stardust.’] Joyce Morgan is a former arts editor of The Sydney Morning Herald, a journalist and author of Journeys on the Silk Road. British-born and Sydney-based, she has worked as a journalist in London, Hong Kong and Sydney and has written on arts and culture for more than two decades.
Publishing details: Allen & Unwin, 2017, pb, 338pp with index.
Nolan Jinxview full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald article ‘Jinx Nolan paints a picture of Sidney’ referring to her exhibition at Wagner Gallery.
Publishing details: SMH, 31 March, 2017, p26
Ref: 223
Leak Bill 1956-2017view full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald obituary
Publishing details: SMH 5 April 2017, p33
Ref: 223
Smith Eric 1919-2017view full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald obituary
Publishing details: SMH 3 April 2017, p26
Ref: 136
Williams George Gilbert Hotspur Murray (1877- 1964)view full entry
Reference: article by Jennifer Palmer, guide at the Art Gallery of South Australia, presented as ‘floor talk’. Biographical notes include 11 illustrations of Williams’ paintings mostly in colour.
Publishing details: unpublished, 2012. (Copy possibly available from AGSA?)
Ref: 136
Barak p20view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,

le Souef Albert and Caroline poker work p22view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Knight Frank house model p56view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Porter B W cabinet maker p60view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Australian quilts p75-82view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
McCrae Georgiana compendium of needlework instruction p87view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Winnicott John wood carver p89view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Fritsch Andrew potter p98view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Ovens Pottery Company p98, 100view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Guthrie’s Epsom Pottery p98view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
McAdam John potter p99view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
McAdam John potter p99view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Bendigo Pottery p100view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Harbour G scrimshaw artist p104view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Vivian William scrimshaw artist p104view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Dunstan W artist p161, 162view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Filmer M painter p16oview full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Kift and Smith banner p162view full entry
Reference: see Colonial crafts in Victoria: Early settlement to 1921. Curated by Murray Walker. Catalogue for National Gallery of Victoria exhibition 1978-79) [This book has sections on: Aborigines; travel; farming; hearth & home; recreation; gold; children; town & metropolis; ceremony etc].
Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. ‘An exhibition catalogue of Colonial Crafts of Victoria from early settlement to 1921 held at the NGV.’ Includes some biographical information.
Publishing details: Craft Council of Australia, Melbourne (for NGV), 1978, b/w illusts, . (some col.) 166pp,
Bock Thomas p15 -16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Bock Alfred p15 -16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Baily H H p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Baily H H p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Goodman George B artist and photograher, Hobart p15view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Frith photograher, Hobart p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Allport Morton photograher, Hobart p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Nixon Bishop Francis Russell photograher, Hobart p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Spurling Stephen photograher, Hobart p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Beattie John Watt, Hobart p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Whitelaw Percy portrait photographer Tasmania p16view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Prout John Skinner as photographer p18view full entry
Reference: see Colonial Life in Tasmania. Fifty years of photography 1855 - 1905. By Alan Sierp. ‘Historic photographs from 1855 to 1905 document the vigorous colonial expansion of Tasmania. These photos document that people were very proud of their new fashions, & new developments in Hobart Town.’ [Unfortunately the names of the photographers of the hundreds of photograph are not given].
Publishing details: Adelaide. Rigby Limited. 1976. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 216pp. Slight wear to dj at top. (sl foxing) to rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white. 1st ed.
Davies Alan view full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Goodman Georgeview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Dalton Edwinview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Glaister Thomasview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hill Thomasview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hetzer Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Freeman Brothersview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Cunningham Andrewview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bardwell Studioview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Davies & Coview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Croft Brosview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Sargent Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Onslow Arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Docker Josephview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Smith Prof. Johnview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Dixson Hughview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bonney Frederickview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Wingate Thomasview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Syer arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Dangar Reginaldview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Allen Arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Perier Albertview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Whitling Arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Power Frederickview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Tremain Johnview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Caird Colinview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
English Jackview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Allen Arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Walter Charlesview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Merlin Beaufoyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
A & A Photographic Companyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
American & Australasian Photographic Companyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bayliss Charlesview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Lindt Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bischoff Josephview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Brodie Alexanderview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Tronier Augustview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Beattie John Wattview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hardie Fredview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Kerry Charlesview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
van der Velden Willemview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Cooke Edward Jview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Blackwood Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Robinson Francis Wview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Freeman & Proutview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Pickering Charlesview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Jenkinson Georgeview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Vaniman Melvinview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Allen Arthurview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Kerry & Coview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hordern Samview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Alan Row & Coview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Yang Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Comiskey Ellenview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Wajon Scottview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Wagner Conradview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Read Reginaldview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hall & Coview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Sharkey Johnview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Check Josephview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Maitland Lethingtonview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Roberts Russellview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hillier Robview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
de Berquelle Raymondview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Australian Photographic Agencyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Edwards Sandyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Lewis Jonview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Fokkema Gerritview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Sleeth Matthewview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Ranken Jackieview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Amendolia Michaelview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Stewert Stevenview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
McDougall Wendyview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hill Ianview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Short Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Frith Frederickview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Murrell & Coview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Johnson Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Buchner Rudolphview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Cazneaux Haroldview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Broughton Glenview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bostock Cecilview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Lindt John Williamview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Searle Edwardview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hood Tedview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Sun Bureauview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hood Samview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Sievers Wolfgangview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Vissel Jozefview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Angelicas Emmanuelview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
de Villentroy Albertview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hewitt Charlesview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Bradford E Aview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Gullick William Aview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hurley Frankview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hickson Jackview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Baglin Douglassview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Marchant Rogerview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hallams Robertview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Smith Robinview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Beal Davidview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Dooley John L Mview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Hallams Robertview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Morley Lewisview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Apfelbaum Benview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Samaha Lucienview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Tedeschi Markview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Baillie Patriciaview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Baillie Patriciaview full entry
Reference: see An Eye For Photography - the Camera in Australia, by Alan Davies. [’With photographs drawn from the extensive collections of the State Library of New South Wales, this landmark publication traces the development of photography in Australia from the earliest portrait daguerreotypes to cutting-edge digital imagery.’] Each photograph reproduced is usually accompanied by some biographical information on the photographer.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press/Melbourne University Press and State Library of NSW, 2004, hc, dw, 229pp, with index, bibliography and notes.
Willding Ian 1941-2017view full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald obituary (conceptual artist
Publishing details: SMH 4-5 March 2017, p35
Ref: 223
McFarlane Robertview full entry
Reference: Still Point, exhibition at the Margaret Whitlam Gallery, Parramatta,
Publishing details: 2017
Ref: 1000
Sauchenko (1913 -1988) view full entry
Reference: see CRITERION AUCTIONEERS, UK, lot 28, 14 April 2017.
A Russian oil on canvas landscape depicting Ormiston Gorge in central Australia by Sauchenko (1913 -1988) together with a Russian school oil on board winter landscape
Norling Robinview full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald obituary, 18 April, 2017, p31 [filed in Robin Norling, introduction by Peter Pinson, Phillip Mathews, 2010, hc, dw, 144pp]
Publishing details: SMH, 18 April , 2017, p31.
Howitt Samuelview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 10 May, 2017 lot 71:
Exhibiting in London from the 1780s, Samuel Howitt was an artist and illustrator who specialised in natural history and sporting subjects. His art was closely associated with Thomas Rowlandson, the pre-eminent English caricaturist and artist of the period, whose sister he married. He sketched at the Royal Menagerie in the Tower of London as well as for some of the great private zoos and natural history collections assembled at the time. Two of Howitt's most important turn-of-the-century patrons were William Bullock and Walter Fawkes.
Samuel Howitt illustrated or contributed illustrations to many books such as Miscellaneous Etchings of Animals (1803), Oriental Field Sports (1807), and Ormes' Foreign Field Sports (1813) that also contained a supplement on the Field Sports of Australia depicting Australian Aborigines.

Howitt was recognised for his lively and accurate depictions of natural history specimens and this is well demonstrated in the four works presented here. The four birds Howitt has illustrated, the Red-Tailed Black Cockatoo, Yellow-Tailed Black Cockatoo, Palm Cockatoo and Regent Honeyeater are now all considered to be endangered species.

SAMUEL HOWITT
(1765 – 1822, British)
A RARE GROUP OF FOUR EARLY WATERCOLOURS OF AUSTRALIAN BIRDS, c.1812
(I) RED-TAILED BLACK COCKATOO, CALYPTORHYNCHUS MAGNIFICUS
watercolour on paper
17.0 x 11.0 cm
signed lower right: Howitt
(II) YELLOW-TAILED BLACK COCKATOO, CALYPTORHYNCHUS FUNEREUS
watercolour on paper
17.0 x 11.0 cm
signed centre right: Howitt
(III) PALM COCKATOO, PROBOSCIGER ATERRIMUS
watercolour on paper
17.5 x 11.0 cm
(IV) REGENT HONEYEATER, XANTHOMYZA PHRYGIA
watercolour on paper
14.0 cm x 11.5 cm
signed lower left: Howitt
Greenhill Harold (1914 - 1995)view full entry
Reference: Harold Greenhill retrospective at Manly Art Gallery : 7 September - 7 October 1979. Tipped in real colour photographs of his work. Not listed on Trove. (1914 - 1995)

Publishing details: Manly Regional Art Gallery.1979, 18pp
Ref: 1009
Australiana Collectionview full entry
Reference: The Australiana Collection, A Tour Of Government House And The Lodge In Canberra, And Admiralty House And Kirribilli House In Sydney,
Publishing details: Fine Arts Press, Aa feature Art & Australia publication, 1990
pb, 112 pages with advertisements,
decorative artsview full entry
Reference: see The Australiana Collection, A Tour Of Government House And The Lodge In Canberra, And Admiralty House And Kirribilli House In Sydney,
Publishing details: Fine Arts Press, Aa feature Art & Australia publication, 1990
pb, 112 pages with advertisements,
Art of Food at Lucio’sview full entry
Reference: The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.


Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Hungry Horse Galleryview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Storrier Timview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Rubin Victorview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Cress Fredview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Coburn Johnview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Benjamin Jasonview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Zofrea Salvatoreview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Shead Garryview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Johnson Kenview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Giannoni Massimoview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Antico Chrisview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Hodgkinson Frankview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Woodward Margaretview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Raftopoulos Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Lanceley Colinview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
White Nigelview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Makin Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Wheeler Vivienneview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Westwood Bryanview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Montesi Carloview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Schaller Markview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
van Nunan Davidview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Beard Johnview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Senbergs Janview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
McDonald Angusview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Petrollo Francescoview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Jacks Robertview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Seidel Brianview full entry
Reference: see The Art of Food at Lucio's by Lucio Galletto & Timothy Fisher. A book about noted Paddington, Sydney, restaurant Lucio’s (Previously The Hungry Horse bistro and gallery), made famous by the artists who have frequented the restaurant, a number of whom had previously exhibited at the Hungry Horse Gallery. Includes recipes. Illustrated by the artist who frequented Lucio’s restaurant.

Publishing details: Craftsman House Sydney 1999 1st edition 187pp., col. pls., index,
Cooper Charles Gview full entry
Reference: The the Woodford Academy - Restoration Series by Charles G. Cooper, A series of 6 pencil prints. 5 prints loose in folder.
Publishing details: Published by the artist (?), nd (1984?)
Ref: 137
Degotardi John 1823-1882view full entry
Reference: John Degotardi 1823-1882 - Printer, publisher and photographer curarted by John Fletcher, exhibition catalogue, State Library of NSW, 1984
Publishing details: State Library of NSW, 1984
Ref: 137
Degotardi John 1823-1882view full entry
Reference: The Art of printing in its various branches : by Johann Nepomuk Degotardi, 1823-1882  

Publishing details: Sydney : Published by J. Degotardi, 1861, 24 pages, [9] leaves of plates (1 folded) : illustrations, facsimile, map, music ; 22 cm. 
Ref: 1000
Calendar of Eventsview full entry
Reference: A calendar of events in Australian history compiled by K.R. Cramp

Publishing details: Royal Australian Historical Society, 1933 
32 p.
Ref: 137
Australian history - chronologyview full entry
Reference: see A calendar of events in Australian history compiled by K.R. Cramp

Publishing details: Royal Australian Historical Society, 1933 
32 p.
Como - Historic Melbpurne Houseview full entry
Reference: Como - Historic Melbourne House. Booklet by the National Trust of Australia (Victoria).
Publishing details: National Trust of Australia (Victoria)., 1982 reprint, pb, 20pp
Ref: 137
Sharpe Wendyview full entry
Reference: New Beginnings - East Timor. By Lola Wilkins. Catalogue of the Timor inspired paintings by Australian artist Wendy Sharpe. This second exhibition of work completed in East Timor under The Australian War Memorials official war art scheme records the desolation of war as well as the new beginnings such as childrens happy faces, compassion between soldier and civilian and an optimism that just a few years before seemed impossible.
Publishing details: Australian War Memorial.. 2000.. Colour plates, 23 pp, paperback.
Ref: 137
Hawkins Weaver (Raokin)view full entry
Reference: Raokin : Weaver Hawkins 1893-1977 : survey exhibition 24th April - 24th May, 1996. (Gallery Irascible, 1st Floor, 216 Coventry St, South Melbourne VIC 3205 )

Publishing details: South Melbourne : Gallery Irascible - Peter Gant Fine Art, [1996] 
[27] p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 137
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: The promised land : the art of Lawrence Daws : a Caloundra Regional Art Gallery travelling exhibition. Catalogue essay by Bettina MacAulay and Desmond MacAulay.
Catalogue of an exhibition held 20 January to 7 March 2010 at Caloundra Regional Art Gallery and travelling to other galleries in Queensland and New South Wales until September 2010.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Caloundra, Qld : Caloundra Regional Art Gallery, 2010 
60 p. : ill. (chiefly col.)
Ref: 137
Mack Ludwig Hirschfeldview full entry
Reference: see Christian Hesse Auktionen
May 20, 2017, 10:00 AM CET
Hamburg-Winterhude , Germany,
Lot 448: Bauhaus - Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack. Optischer Farbenmischer (Farbkreisel). Wooden gyroscope and seven multi-colored serigraph paper disks. Probably around 1950. After studying color theory in Stuttgart with Adolf Hölzel in Stuttgart in 1919, Hirschfeld-Mack wrote to the Bauhaus as a student. In 1922/23 he initiated an extracurricular painter's seminar, which is published in the Bauhaus book of 1923 as a lectureship by Kandinsky with color plates by Hirschfeld-Mack. At about the same time, together with Kurt Schwerdtfeger, he developed his "Reflektorische Lichtspiele" (color light games). It is also probable that the color circle emerged during these years. After his exile in England and Australia, Hirschfeld-Mack returned to Europe in 1949, 1958 and again in 1964. The present version of the color circle (with back typographical inscription of the discs in German and English) he probably made in Australia and brought some copies as gifts with to Germany. It is possible that the production took place in Germany at the opening of the Bauhaus Archive in Berlin (1961). - We could not prove a copy of the actual draft time. A replica from the 1970s was shown in the large Hirschfeld-Mack retrospective (Bozen / Vienna / Frankfurt aM 2000/2001), and a further copy of this early version was auctioned from the same provenance in our auction 11 (May 2015) . - We would like to thank Dr. Peter Stasny, Vienna, for his explanations. Diameter of color discs: 10.0 cm, carrier box: 22.3: 44.0 cm, gyro 4.0: 7.5 cm. - Some discs loose, some backside fixed with filmoplast. See L. Hirschfeld-Mack, Cat. 2000/2001, Cat. 79 with illustration on page 85
Grahame-Montgomery Alice Anne (1847-1931)view full entry
Reference: See Davidson’s Auction, 30 April, 2017, Lot 104: 'A Sunset from Hill View, Moss Vale NSW, 1893.' Together with a volume 'Glimpses of Four Continents,' 1893, written by the artist.
Lane Hview full entry
Reference: See Davidson’s Auction, 30 April, 2017, Lot 177: H LANE (Shipwreck on Ulverstone Beach, Tasmania) oil on canvas signed lower left: H Lane 30 x 19 cm
Stocquler Edwinview full entry
Reference: see WRIGHT MARSHALL LTD, UK, 9 May, 2017, lot 364: Attributed to Edwin R L Stocqueler (aka Edwin Siddons, 1829-1895) - 'Town Scene, possibly Dulwich' Oil, further info verso, approx 24x18cm, mounted and inset swept gilt frame.
Hetley Mrs Charlesview full entry
Reference: The Native Flowers of New Zealand
Illustrated in Colours. Reproduction of some 45 species on 36 plates, the artist outlines her journeys in search of appropriate specimans in the preface.
Publishing details: London 1888. Folio [37cms]. 36 chromolithograph plates, some isolated foxing, trimmed and bound into later maroon half calf with gilt title on front board.
Ref: 1000
Featon, Mr and Mrs E Hview full entry
Reference: Art Album of New Zealand Flora,
Being a Systematic and Popular Description of the Native Flowering Plants of New Zealand and the Adjacent Islands.
Publishing details: Bock and Cousins 1889. Volume 1. [the second volume was never published.] Complete with 40 chromolithographs with descriptive letterpress.
Ref: 1000
Hudson G Vview full entry
Reference: The Butterflies and Moths of New Zealand.
with 62 plates.
Publishing details: Wellington: Ferguson & Osborn 1028. xi, 386p, colour frontis, 61 plates [52 colour]. 30 cm, original half marron calf binding with green cloth boards and gilt titles
WInklemann Henryview full entry
Reference: WInklemann, Henry, and G A Read [Photographers]
Visit of Members of New Zealand.
Legislature to the Cook and other Islands, 1903.
The album has the following letterpress text attached inside front
cover. ‘The Voyage of which the accompanying photographs form a
partial record was undertaken in April-June 1902 for the purpose of giving members of the New Zealand legislature an opportunity of
seeing the Cook and other Islands, which were annexed to the colony
in June 1901. In all fteen islands were visited, eight of them being
within the extended boundaries of New Zealand, the remaining seven
belong to one or other of the adjacent groups viz Society Islands,
Samoa, Tonga or Friendly Islands, and Fiji. The total distance travelled
was 8,015 miles and the time occupied seven weeks....’
Album contains 100 photographs 11 x 15.5cms all titled, album
measures 16 x 34cms, bound in half calf and cloth boards with gilt
titles. Offerred at Art + Object auction, 3 May 2017.
Ref: 1000
Read G Aview full entry
Reference: see WInklemann, Henry, and G A Read [Photographers]
Visit of Members of New Zealand.
Legislature to the Cook and other Islands, 1903.
The album has the following letterpress text attached inside front
cover. ‘The Voyage of which the accompanying photographs form a
partial record was undertaken in April-June 1902 for the purpose of giving members of the New Zealand legislature an opportunity of
seeing the Cook and other Islands, which were annexed to the colony
in June 1901. In all fteen islands were visited, eight of them being
within the extended boundaries of New Zealand, the remaining seven
belong to one or other of the adjacent groups viz Society Islands,
Samoa, Tonga or Friendly Islands, and Fiji. The total distance travelled
was 8,015 miles and the time occupied seven weeks....’
Album contains 100 photographs 11 x 15.5cms all titled, album
measures 16 x 34cms, bound in half calf and cloth boards with gilt
titles. Offerred at Art + Object auction, 3 May 2017.
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: Augustus Earle - Sketches Illustrative of the Native Inhabitants of New Zealand. From original drawings by Augustus Earle, Esq. Draughtsman of the H.M.S. Beagle 1838. the 10 hand coloured plates are of exceptional quality with vibrant colouring. All with interleaving tissues, 37 x 55.3cms. Bagnall 1758
Publishing details: Lithographed & Published under the auspices of the New Zealand Association by Robert Martin & Co. 26 Long Acre. London 1838. Oblong Folio. Complete as issued in original cloth backed boards with pictoial papered covers with New Zealand Association [coat of arms], 1p of descriptive letter press,
Ref: 1000
Taylor Mervyn (NZ)view full entry
Reference: Mervyn Taylor - Wood Engravings.

Publishing details: Christchurch: The Caxton Press 1946, All plates with tissue guards, bound in original red cloth with paper title label, cloth
Ref: 1000
Wright Rixview full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, 12 May, 2017 (THE CONTENTS OF MARKDALE, BINDA, NSW) LOT 258
Rix Wright (Australian, b. 1930-2009),
Ariel, composition sculpture of a young maiden kneeling, EST.
$300 - $500, height 95 cm

[Rix Wright was the son of the artist Hilda Rix Nicholas]
Bunny Rupertview full entry
Reference: The Life and Art of Rupert Bunny: A Catalogue Raisonne, volumes 1 & 2. By David Thomas. ‘Australia’s most internationally-acclaimed artist of his time, Rupert Bunny’s life and career was predominantly spent in France before his return to Australia. Combining research from previously unknown letters and diaries with works from Bunny’s prolific output, David Thomas has created the first comprehensive history of the artist’s life and career. Over two volumes which include a catalogue of his oils, monotypes, works on paper, embroideries, sketchbooks, signature styles and canvas makers’ stamps together with solo and group exhibitions to date with their catalogues and reviews, The Life and Art of Rupert Bunny is a significant contribution to art history.’
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Thames and Hudson (Australia) Pty Ltd, 2017, Hardback, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2017.
2 volumes (287, 207 pages), colour illustrations, in slip-case, edition limited to 500.

Australian medalsview full entry
Reference: CARLISLE, L.J. AUSTRALIAN COMMEMORATIVE MEDALS & MEDALETS FROM 1788. Many b/w ills. including many photographs of medals. Folding Supplementary Price-Guide inserted.
Publishing details: Syd. B & C Press. 1983. 4to. Or.cl. xvi,312pp. Edition of 160
Ref: 1000
Haycraft Johnview full entry
Reference: Where Was I? By John Haycraft. A collection from 60 years of drawing and painting. A collection of drawings & watercolours by Sydney based artist John Haycraft. Best known for his architectural drawings, he is a lecturer in architectural drawing at the UNSW, Uni of Newcastle, & SCA.
Publishing details: Lily eld. Haycraft Dulowy Ltd. n.d. (2006?) 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 207pp. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white.
Ref: 1000
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: LINDSAY, Honey. ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW WITH HONEY LINDSAY (DAUGHTER OF NORMAN LINDSAY). Interviewer Julie Petersen. Interview date 24th April 2003.
Publishing details: Transcription by Beryl Winter. n.p. (Sydney) 2003. Foolscap folio. Plastic ring bound. 40pp. Four photographs on front wrapper.

Ref: 1000
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: MOORE, David R. MY PHOTO ALBUM. My Photo Album and A Very Casual Commentary. 2 vols. ‘Photographer David R.Moore’s personal photograph album, printed in an oblong photo album format, together with a book of notes explaining the goings on in each picture. A personal & intimate glimpse.’
Publishing details: Syd. David R. Moore. 2002. Oblong 4to. & 4to. Or.cl. Vol 1. 116pp. Vol 2. 82pp. Vol 1. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Evatt Mary Aliceview full entry
Reference: see MURPHY, John. EVATT. A life.
Publishing details: Syd. University of NSW Publishing. 2016. Col.ill.bds. Dustjacket. 451pp. b/w plates & a col ill. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Turner Kit view full entry
Reference: Biographical information included in description of a work being offered on Ebay, May 4, 1017: ‘An artist and metal worker, Kit Turner studied at the Canterbury College of Art in New Zealand, and in 1913-1914 at the National Gallery of Victoria with Max Meldrum. She exhibited her work from 1941 until her death in 1970... originally from New Zealand, Kit Turner (-1970) was prominent in that country's early Arts & Crafts movement. Later she became well known in Australia as a member of the Max Meldrum School, having studied with him. Here is a lovely earlyish depiction of presumably a Victorian rural scene .. circa 1930s.’

Struth Thomasview full entry
Reference: see KUNSTHAUS LEMPERTZ auction, Germany, 1 June, 2017, estimate 35,000 - 40,000 euro.
Thomas Struth
Paradise 5, Daintree, Australia
C-Print under Plexiglass (Diasec). 134 x 174.5 cm (176.5 x 214 cm frame dimension). In artist frame. On the back of the frame artist's label, signed in pencil and dated, titled and numbered. Copy 2/20. - Slight age-related color changes.
Literature: Ingo Hartmann and Hans Rudolf Reust, Thomas Struth. New Pictures from Paradies, Ausst.kat. Universitat Salamanca, Centro de Fotografia et al., Munich 2002, o.S. With Fig.

Thomas Struth 's "Paradise" series is a long - term project, in which the artist has been working continuously since 1966, without temporal or regional limitations. Struth finds his motifs on his journeys in various parts of the world. The work "Daintree, Australia", made in 1998 in the tropical rainforest in north-east Australia, belongs to the earliest eight works of this series. The work differs from the confronting close-up views and all-over perspectives of other works of the Paradise series by a breakdown into traditional compositional features of the landscape painting with foreground, perspective and horizon. However, the connecting feature of the individual images of the series lies in the way of the reproduction of reality: the large-scale works allow the viewer to immerse himself in the picture, formally engulf him in their presence.
"With the choice of the title, Struth wanted to make it clear that he did not care about botany or an elegy on a lost paradise. What interested him, in fact, was the mode of perception, the special way of looking, which could trigger such hyper-density images; In addition, the title was a slightly melancholy reflection on what utopian horizons, which kinds of progressive thinking would be possible after the end of the cold war. [...] Struth himself considers paradise images to be his 'most intuitive' group of works, and the rather painterly handling of the fabric, he believes, is influenced not least by his long years of Tai Chi practice. " Tobias Bezzola / James Lingwood, in: Anette Kruszynski and others (eds.), Thomas Struth, photographs 1978-2010, Kunsthaus Zürich et al., Munich 2010, p. 206).
King Henryview full entry
Reference: see NOSBÜSCH & STUCKE GMBH auction Germany, 2-3 June, 2017 lot 1002: Photo album with 38 early views of Sydney and surroundings, Australia, 1880s. Green full leather album (25.4 x 31.5 cm) with gilt-tooling and gilt-stamped inscription "Sydney 8th Nov., 1888" on front cover. With 38 vintage albumen prints (each c. 15 x 20.5 cm), each with title and photographer's name "Henry King, Sydn. " in the negative. A comprehensive album of Sydney and its suroundings, including numerous impressive views of the city and its harbour as well as landscapes and nature views. The album is slightly rubbed. At start and end the images show some foxing and soiling, some images with slight fading in edges, otherwise most in very good condition.
Moffatt Tracyview full entry
Reference: offered by Douglas Stewart Fine Books May 2017: Something More No. 1 - (also known as: Untitled, No. 1, from the series Something More). Cibachrome photographic print, created 1989, 965 x 1270 mm (viewable image), 1150 x 1440 mm (frame), framed under Perspex by Art Passepartout, Berlin, white mount and white timber frame. Image number one from the series of nine photographs Something More, printed in an edition of 30 numbered copies, printed to full sheet size, this one of 25 artist’s proofs, signed ‘T. Moffatt 89’ verso.
“In the photo series for which she has become internationally renowned, Moffatt sets up clearly staged tableau images which have a narrative thread but in which many stories are being told. Themes with violence and sentiment mingle, past and present times are combined through flashbacks and the supernatural forever invades the familiar world. To this mix Moffatt brings her perspective on identity in local terms of her Aboriginality and femininity, but she also carefully styles her narratives to allow multiple readings beyond the specific politics of Australian identity. Something more has the style of a set of stills for a film about the trials of a poor but restless ‘coloured’ girl in rural Australia who wants ‘something more’ out of life than her lot in the back-blocks.” (Gael Newton, National Gallery of Australia)
The suite of nine photographs which comprise the series Something more was originally sold for $2500 (the set) by the Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney, in the early 1990s. The most recent set to be sold at auction made $227,050 at Christie’s, Sydney, in 2004, just over ten years after the release. Thirty complete sets were numbered in the edition, although images could also be purchased as single prints. This example is one of 25 unnumbered artist’s proofs. The Something More series has been exhibited extensively internationally and is reproduced in numerous publications on contemporary photography.
“Tracey Moffatt is probably Australia’s most successful artist ever, both nationally and internationally. She is certainly one of the few Australian artists to have established a global market for her work”. (Hannah Fink in Tradition today: Indigenous art in Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2004).
From her varied and evolving oeuvre, Something More No. 1 remains Moffatt’s most well-recognised and desired image, the lingering enigma of the narrative continuing to provoke questions of identity, belonging and a complex sexuality. Firmly grounded within a contemporary indigenous experience of Australian society, Moffatt’s work still explores universal themes, which explains how, probably more than any other Australian photographer, her work has been accepted and collected internationally.
Tracey Moffatt is representing Australia at the Venice Biennale in 2017.
Collections (other examples):
• National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
• Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
• Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
• Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney (an unsigned proof)
• National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
• Murray Art Museum, Albury
• Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart
• Sammlung Klein, Eberdingen, Germany
• Museum moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien
 
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Eyre Johnview full entry
Reference: ‘John Eyre, a wool-comber and weaver, before his arrival in Australia in 1784 was convicted of house-breaking at the Coventry Assizes in 1799 and transported for seven years. In June 1804 he advertised his desire to buy a box of watercolours. This ultimately led to the production of four plates now known as Eyre’s Views, in a number of impressions. The varieties are detailed in First Views of Australia 1788-1825 A History of Early Sydney by Tim McCormick.’ From Terry Ingram article on AASD May 2017.
Mackinlay Miguelview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine May, 2017, vol 39, no 2. article by Dorothy Erickson, ‘Michael Mackinlay the Australian Years, pages 22-29. with 23 illustrations.
Osborne Gladysview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine May, 2017, vol 39, no 2. article by Megan Martin: “Gladys Osborne’s portrait miniatures, page 6 with 3 illustrations.
Campbell Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine May, 2017, vol 39, no 2. article by Dianne Byrne: Colonial Artist John Campbell in Brisbane, page 32-8 with 7 illustrations.
Trevor Kennedy Collectionview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine May, 2017, vol 39, no 2. article by Phillip Black, pages 30-31
Keating James and family carpenters and cabinet makersview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine May, 2017, vol 39, no 2. article by Warwick Oakman ‘A Macquarie-era sideboard’, p 10-21.
Levinson Ernestina 1887-1951view full entry
Reference: student of J. W. R. Linton in Western Australia. See Australiana magazine May, 2017, p24
Martin Maxview full entry
Reference: See Australiana magazine May, 2017, p28 for reference to association with artist Miguel Mackinlay in London c1922 when Martin was hung ‘on the line’ at the RA.
Cant Jamesview full entry
Reference: Photocopies of lists of the paintings by James Cant and Dora Chapman given to the Art Gallery of South Australia in 1995. There are approximately 36 pages listing works by title and often providing dates of the works. Few have sizes. Some works are annotated. About 1000 works listed altogether? There is a list of works that were sent for auction at Small and Whitfield in Adelaide in April 1999.
Ref: 54
Chapman Doraview full entry
Reference: Photocopies of lists of the paintings by James Cant and Dora Chapman given to the Art Gallery of South Australia in 1995. There are approximately 36 pages listing works by title and often providing dates of the works. Few have sizes. Some works are annotated. About 1000 works listed altogether? There is a list of works that were sent for auction at Small and Whitfield in Adelaide in April 1999.
Ref: 54
von Guerard Eugene Breakneck Gorge, Hepburn Springs, 1964view full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia catalogue, 3 May, 2017, special 14-page brochure accompanying catalogue, with essay on this work. Auction also had View of Granite Rock, 1872 with essay lot 46.
Newby - The David Newby Collectionview full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia catalogue, 3 May, 2017, catalogue of 30 works.
Dattilo-Rubbo Antonioview full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia catalogue, 3 May, 2017, lot 50 ‘Where Daddy Fell’, 1915, with 2-page essay
Pennock Colinview full entry
Reference: Intrusion, Arthouse Gallery invite with brief essay
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2pp card, May 2017.
Ref: 223
Norling Robinview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for obituary by Jonathan Cooper.
Rapotec Stanislausview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for essay by Denise Mimmocchi on Meditating on Good Friday and another essay on Rapotec by Leanne Santoro
Olsen John tapestriesview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for essay by Leanne Santoro on Olsen’s tapestries
Stephenson David photographerview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for interview by Isobel Parker Philip
Kaldor family collectionview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for essay by Sarah Rees
Ball Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for obituary by Anne Ryan
Scarce Yhonnie glass artistview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, May-June, 2017, for article by Sarah Couper
Treasures from Private Collectionsview full entry
Reference: Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
Ref: 137
Thwaites George cabinetmakerview full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 15, 7 items listed.
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
Prenzel Robert view full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 22, 4 items listed
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
samplersview full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 24-5, essay and about a dozen items listed.
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
jewellery Australian view full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 26-31, essay and numerous items listed.
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
Charlotte Medalsview full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 34
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
Separation medals view full entry
Reference: see Treasures from Private Collections presented by The National Gallery Women’s Association, 1993 at Sotheby’s Melbourne, page 34
Publishing details: Sotheby’s, 1993, pb, 38pp
Illingworth Nelson 1862-1926view full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With ilustrations.‘The Crimson Thread of Kinship’ (Sir Henry Parkes), illustrated, essay by John Wade.
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Josephson Jacob 1774-1843 jewellerview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by John Houstone
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Dick Alexander silversmith -1843view full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Kevin Fahey
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
King James 1797-1857 potterview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Christina Simpson
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Lenehan Andrew 1815-1886 furniture makerview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Kevin Fahey
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Field Thomas c1814-1880 potterview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by John Wade
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Delarue Hippolyte 1829-1881 jeweller and silversmithview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Michel Reymond
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Cunningham James 1841-1903view full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by John Wade
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Kerr William 1839-1896 jeweller silversmithview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Alan Landis
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Rider John C 1851-2 - 1934 glassmakerview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Annette Keenan
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Baird John 1834-1894 sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Alan Landis
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Webb Frank P 1859-1942view full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. With essay on this craftsman by Annette Keenan
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Mashman Brothers & Thomas Stevens 1890sview full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations.
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Stevens Thomas view full entry
Reference: see Sydney’s Colonial Craftsmen, Elizabeth Bay House exhibition. With essay by David Dolan. Brief essays on 13 craftsmen. With illustrations. Mashman Brothers & Thomas Stevens 1890s
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust, 1982, pb, 36pp, list of exhibits inserted
Admiralty House and Kirribilli Houseview full entry
Reference: Admiralty House, brochure for Open Day, 7 February, 1982, historical notes and lists of items of interest. Admiralty House and Kirribilli House
Publishing details: 5 + 2 foolscap sheets, 1982
Ref: 50
Kirribilli Houseview full entry
Reference: see Admiralty House, brochure for Open Day, 7 February, 1982, historical notes and lists of items of interest.
Publishing details: 5 + 2 foolscap sheets, 1982
Mort Eireneview full entry
Reference: Country Cousins - presented in picture and rhyme. With full-page wood engravings.
Publishing details: G. B. Philip & Son, nd [1904-18]
Ref: 1000
Robertson E Graemeview full entry
Reference: Sydney Lace - Ornamental Cast Iron in Architecture in Sydney by E. Graeme Robertson
Publishing details: Melbourne, 1962
Ref: 1000
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: Atomic Civilisation by Hardy Wilson. [’Following the atomic climax of the Second World War, the highly regarded architect W. Hardy Wilson developed his own personal philosophy of world peace, which involved abandoning the ideologies of fascism, communism and democracy, and in its place elevating the appreciation of aesthetics. “I see the world, not as struggling between communism and democracy, but simply and directly obeying the dictates of universal instinct to force humanity to obey the laws of esthetic creativeness which control the world, and thereby raise the people to their rightful place of esthetic leadership, which alone makes man the first animal.” Wilson’s post-political restructure of the international order, like that of his contemporary Lionel Lindsay, is unfortunately influenced by his anti-Semetic sentiments, he sees the Jews as incapable of creating their own aesthetics and instead manipulating the system around them. Wilson sees the future as a harmony between East and West, the two great origins of creative aesthetics, with Australia geographically positioned as a bridge between these two cultures.
A fine example of Australian private press with a political dimension to art theory arising from the crisis of the recent world war.’ Douglas Stewart Fine Books, 2021]
Publishing details: Ruskin Press, 1945, edition limited to 100, pp. 109 printed on goatskin parchment, seven hand-coloured photographs reproducing Hardy Wilson drawings,
Ref: 1000
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: Eucalypts
Publishing details: privately printed, 1941, edition limited to 25 copies
Ref: 1000
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: Instinct.
Publishing details: Ruskin Press, 1945, 127 pp, limeted to 50 copies
Ref: 1000
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: see ADB: Wilson, William Hardy (1881–1955)
by Richard E. Apperly
This article was published in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 12, (MUP), 1990
William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, was born on 14 February 1881 at Campbelltown, New South Wales, second of four surviving sons of William Joshua Wilson, agent, and his wife Jessie Elizabeth, née Shepherd, both native-born. Living with his parents at Burwood, Billy attended (1893-98) Newington College; he passed the junior public examination, played cricket in the first XI and captained the first Rugby XV. In 1899-1904 he was articled to Harry Kent of Kent & Budden, architects, and attended Sydney Technical College at night; he qualified in 1904 and was president of the Architectural Students' Society. Meanwhile, he had taken lessons from the artist Sydney Long and exhibited water-colours with the Royal Art Society of New South Wales in 1903-04.
Having sailed for England in 1905, Wilson was employed in the office of William Flockhart, architect, of New Bond Street, London, and passed the intermediate and final examinations of the Royal Institute of British Architects (1906, 1908). He joined the Chelsea Arts Club, served as its secretary and made friends with George Lambert and Arthur Streeton. With Stacey Neave, Wilson travelled in Europe and the United States of America where he was attracted by the early architecture of the eastern States and impressed by the colonial revival style.
Back in London, Wilson lived at Chelsea and collected antique furniture and objets d'art. Returning home in 1910, on 22 November he married Margaret Rachel Reid McKenzie (d.1939) at St Stephen's Presbyterian Church, Sydney. By then he was calling himself Hardy. In 1913 he entered practice with Neave in George Street. Determined to make Australians as aware of their early colonial heritage as Americans had become of theirs, Wilson had begun to make drawings of colonial buildings in New South Wales and Tasmania: he 'looked at buildings with a painter's eye as much as an architect's', even noting the plants in their gardens. Finding Julian Ashton 'a beacon of hope in a city of indifference', Wilson exhibited regularly with the Society of Artists; with Ashton, Elioth Gruner and others, he founded the Fine Arts Society, a small commercial gallery. His work was to be included in the 1923 Exhibition of Australian Art at Burlington House, London.
Wilson's architectural commissions consisted almost entirely of houses and small commercial buildings: work at this scale best suited his talents. His admiration of early Australian architecture influenced the design of his houses: two of his best-known were built in Sydney's northern suburbs. The colonial house, Horsley, provided the source of his design for Eryldene, Gordon, completed in 1914 for E. G. Waterhouse. Similarly, Clarendon at Windsor was the model for his home, Purulia, Wahroonga, completed in 1916.
That year Neave joined the army and their office closed. Wilson continued to work at Purulia on his drawings and in 1920 The Cow Pasture Road was published by Art in Australia Ltd. The firm re-opened that year in Spring Street with a new partner John Berry. At a time when Australian domestic architecture was characterized by complexity of shape and detail, Wilson's revival of a simple Australian colonial idiom constituted a significant development. Wilson, Neave & Berry's design (1922) for Peapes & Co. Ltd's menswear store in George Street was a scholarly adaptation of the eighteenth-century English Georgian style to a medium-rise city commercial building.
Wilson contributed to Art in Australia, the Home, Sydney Morning Herald and other journals. His architectural works and writings, with the houses and teaching of Professor Leslie Wilkinson, encouraged many Australian architects in the 1920s and 1930s to adopt a composite idiom of Australian colonial, British Georgian and Mediterranean vernacular influences. Visiting China in 1921, Wilson was greatly impressed by the architecture of Peking and avowed his intention to evolve an architectural style for Australia which would combine the best of the Oriental and Occidental worlds: he designed Celestion, a Chinese-style house that was never built.
In 1922 he finished his drawings of old colonial architecture, sold Purulia and went to England and Europe where he sought the best printmakers and printers. In Athens he wrote the introduction to Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania (Sydney, 1924); it contained fifty collotype reproductions of his drawings which were executed by Max Jaffe in Vienna. Returning to Sydney in 1925, Wilson became increasingly dissatisfied with the local profession and with the standard of workmanship in the building industry. In 1926 the Commonwealth government purchased his drawings of old colonial architecture for £3000. His 'last effort in the art of architecture' was a small Chinese tea-house erected at Eryldene in 1927; he left the partnership, and travelled through Europe to London where he lived at St John's Wood. In 1929 The Dawn of a New Civilization was published in London: in this autobiographical work Wilson referred to himself in the third person as 'Richard Le Measurer'.
Again returning to Sydney, Wilson moved in 1930 to Melbourne and next year to Flowerdale Farm in north-western Tasmania where he farmed very badly, wrote for the Burnie Advocate and published a fantasy, Yin Yang (1934). In Melbourne again from 1935, he was recommended by the trustees of the National Gallery of Victoria in September 1936 to be director, but the government appointed J. S. MacDonald. In 1938 Wilson acquired a property at Wandin, near Mount Dandenong, and on 27 February 1940 at St John's Anglican Church, Toorak, married a widow Elsie Rose Hughes MacLean, née McMurtrie; they lived in her home at Kew, Melbourne, when not at Wandin. He was an inveterate walker and sustained his love of birds by keeping poultry.
In his later years Wilson published Collapse of Civilization (1936); Grecian and Chinese Architecture (1937), profusely illustrated with his own drawings and printed on goatskin vellum by Percy Green; the autobiographical Eucalyptus (Wandin, 1941); Instinct (Wandin, 1945); and Atomic Civilization (1949): all were limited editions. Convinced of the supreme importance of the creative artist, Wilson believed that Western society was decadent and materialistic, needing to be revitalized by a fusion of East and West. A mystic, with down-to-earth moments, he reiterated his belief in a unified world civilization. He had presented fifty of his drawings of Grecian and Chinese architecture to the Commonwealth National Library in 1935. In 1954 he gave that library forty-six drawings and plans for a visionary city, redolent of China, to be built at Kurrajong in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales; fourteen of the drawings were published in Kurrajong: Sit-Look-See (Kew, 1954).
Sydney Ure Smith described Wilson as 'exceptionally tall, with a studious head, always with a rather quizzical expression—at times a kindly smile hovered around his mouth. He was an impressive character—dominant, dogmatic at times, appreciative and enthusiastic about the particular idea he was propounding … Extremely impatient … he was quick to make up his mind about a person's character!'. Survived by his wife, and by the son of his first marriage, Wilson died on 16 December 1955 at Richmond, Melbourne, and was cremated with Presbyterian forms. His portrait by George Henry is held by the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Select Bibliography
• S. Ure Smith and B. Stevens (eds), Domestic Architecture in Australia (Syd, 1919)
• National Trust of Australia (New South Wales), William Hardy Wilson, a 20th Century Colonial, 1881-1955, exhibition catalogue (Syd, 1980), and for bibliography
• Home (Sydney), June 1920, p 11, 1 Mar 1922, p 12
• South West Pacific, no 21, 1949, p 7
• Sydney Morning Herald, 2 May, 14 June 1922, 23, 24 Sept 1936, 6 Oct 1944, 17 Jan 1981
• R. E. Apperly, Sydney houses 1914-1939 (M.Arch thesis, University of New South Wales, 1972)
• private information.
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of drawings of late-Georgian architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania / by W. Hardy Wilson


Publishing details: Sydney : Anthony Hordern & Sons, Fine Art Gallery, 1919, 8 p. ; 21 cm. 
Ref: 1000
architectureview full entry
Reference: see Wilson William Hardy, Catalogue of drawings of late-Georgian architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania / by W. Hardy Wilson


Publishing details: Sydney : Anthony Hordern & Sons, Fine Art Gallery, 1919, 8 p. ; 21 cm. 
Australian Collectors’ Quarterlyview full entry
Reference: articles on Wesfarmers Collection. etc
Publishing details: Aug-Oct 1990
Ref: 30
Australian Business Collectors Annualview full entry
Reference: Australian Business Collectors Annual, 1985 - see box 90b
Publishing details: 1985
Ref: 90
Waller Christian the Prints and Prose ofview full entry
Reference: see Australian Business Collectors Annual, 1985, p80-84 with illustrations. - see box 90b
Publishing details: 1985
Merten John cabinet makerview full entry
Reference: see Australian Business Collectors Annual, 1985, p100-105 - see box 90b
Publishing details: 1985
Wedgewood and Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Business Collectors Annual, 1985, p120-123 - see box 90b
Publishing details: 1985
Antipodesview full entry
Reference: ‘Antipodes’ magazine includes article on Aboriginal king plates
Publishing details: Vol II no 2, 1998
Ref: 38
Reed Joseph architectview full entry
Reference: see Antipodes magazine includes article on Aboriginal king plates architect of the Royal Exhibition building, Melbourne.
Publishing details: Vol II no 2, 1998
pokerworkview full entry
Reference: see Country Style magazine Oct-Nov, 1990, p30-33
Publishing details: Country Style magazine Oct-Nov, 1990,
Marchant Bobview full entry
Reference: see Country Style magazine Oct-Nov, 1990, p50-53
Publishing details: Country Style magazine Oct-Nov, 1990,
Art Bulletin of Tasmaniaview full entry
Reference: The Art Bulletin of Tasmania
Publishing details: 1986
Ref: 6
Tanner Edwinview full entry
Reference: see The Art Bulletin of Tasmania, article by Gwen Harwood, p6-12
Publishing details: 1986
Jack Kennethview full entry
Reference: see The Art Bulletin of Tasmania, article by Kenneth Jack on The Charm of Hobart, p13-19,
Publishing details: 1986
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see The Art Bulletin of Tasmania, article by Hendrik Kolenberg, Lloyd Rees - later paintings and technique.
Publishing details: 1986
Jones Charles silversmithview full entry
Reference: see The Art Bulletin of Tasmania, article on Charles Jones, convict silversmith of Van Diemen’s Land
Publishing details: 1986
Art exhibitions in Tasmania in the nineteenth century - a chronologyview full entry
Reference: see The Art Bulletin of Tasmania, article on Art exhibitions in Tasmania in the nineteenth century - a chronology.
Publishing details: 1986
Broadhurst Florence p57-62view full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Shen Jiawei p69view full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Lee Lindy p65view full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Yang William p65-6view full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Wei Guen p67view full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition held at the S.H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust Centre . Sydney, 8 August - 28 September 2008. "William Hardy Wilson (1881-1955), architect, artist and author, was the catalyst for this exhibition wherein I wanted to explore his obsession with China. My aim was to use his ideas as the starting point from which I could explore the cross-cultural interaction between China and Australia through history and the continuing dynamic synergy between the two cultures. ."

Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Australian art and Chinaview full entry
Reference: see YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition h

see chapter titled The Influence of China on Australian art bu Joanna Capon.
Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: see essay by Zeny Edwards in YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition h

see chapter titled The Influence of China on Australian art bu Joanna Capon.
Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Chinese art and Australiaview full entry
Reference: see essay by James Broadbent in YIN-YANG China in Australia by Zeny Edwards. With James Broadbent, Peter Valder, Joanna Capon, Helen O’Neill, Jane Watters, Kylie Kwon. Published in association with the 'Yin-Yang : China in Australia' exhibition h

see chapter titled The Influence of China on Australian art bu Joanna Capon.
Publishing details: Published by S H Ervin Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia (2008)
Art Gallery of Western Australiaview full entry
Reference: Thirty-two colour postcards of works from the permanent collection and views of the gallery / the Art Gallery of Western Australia.
Publishing details: The Gallery, c1981, 18pp
Australian women artistsview full entry
Reference: see Review: Works by Women from the Permanent Collection. Exhibition booklet for show of the same title held at the AGNSW in 1995 - extensive list of works by women artists whose work is held by the AGNSW - B&W plates
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, Australia, 1995. Soft cover. various (illustrator). 1st Edition. 28 pages.
Brassil Joanview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Campbell Barbaraview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Danko Aleksview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Eli Bonitaview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Fabyc Deejview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Frank Daleview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Graham Anneview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Grayson Richardview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Grounds Joanview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Hall Adrianview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Johnson Timview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Jones Lyndalview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Kennedy Peterview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Kreckler Derekview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Luke Michelleview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Milani Lyndallview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Miller Sarahview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Mortensen Kevinview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Nash Rodview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Open Cityview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Orr Jillview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Parr Mikeview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Post Arrivalistsview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Roberts Lukeview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Sabiel Annaview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Schasher Alanview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Scott Jillview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Sheridan Noelview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Sone Yujiview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Splintersview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Sproul Lindaview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Stelarcview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
The Sydney Frontview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Thwaite Pennyview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Unsworth Kenview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
VNS Matrixview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Walton Judeview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Wicks Arthurview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Wynne-Jones Angharadview full entry
Reference: see 25 Years of Performance Art in Australia
Nick Waterlow [’Publication for an exhibition and performance project that examined the history of performance art in Australia from a contemporary viewpoint. The exhibition of installation, objects and photographic and video documentation of performance art was accompanied by a season of contemporary performance. Exhibiting Artists included : John Davis, Jill Scott, Mike Parr, Sam Schoenbaum, Peter Tyndall, Jill Orr, Anne Graham, Stephen Cummins, Shelly Lasica. Curated by Nick Waterlow with essays. One of the few volumes which looks at the history of this genre in Australia. ‘]
Publishing details: Ivan Dougherty Gallery Sydney, Sydney Australia, 1994. Soft cover.
Tension 19view full entry
Reference: Tension 19 [magazine] - Special Edition, from Leantime to Dreamtime - a Chronicle of Australian Art 1980-1989. Contributors: Crawford, Ashley; Terence Hogan; Ray Edgar; Catharine Lumby (eds); Charles Green; Francis Pound. [Tension was an Australian arts magazine, published six times a year]. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Virgin Press Publisahing Co., 1989, 88pp, Numerous colour and b&w illustrations throughout. Large format. Staple-bound pictorial wraps.
Ref: 137
Australian Contemorary art 1980-89view full entry
Reference: see Tension 19 [magazine] - Special Edition, from Leantime to Dreamtime - a Chronicle of Australian Art 1980-1989. Contributors: Crawford, Ashley; Terence Hogan; Ray Edgar; Catharine Lumby (eds); Charles Green; Francis Pound. [Tension was an Australian arts magazine, published six times a year].
Publishing details: Virgin Press Publisahing Co., 1989, 88pp, Numerous colour and b&w illustrations throughout. Large format. Staple-bound pictorial wraps.
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: Macquarie Galleries catalogue. 88 works listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: 1961
Ref: 1000
Willoughby Grahamview full entry
Reference: Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Meara at Woolloomooloo Gallery. Includes biographical information.
Publishing details: Woolloomooloo Gallery, 1986, 8pp
Ref: 1000
O’Meara Rhondaview full entry
Reference: see Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Meara at Woolloomooloo Gallery. Catalogue Includes biographical information.
Publishing details: Woolloomooloo Gallery, 1986, 8pp
Andrew Brookview full entry
Reference: Brook Andrew - Eye to Eye. Travelling exhibition
Publishing details: Monash University Gallery, 2007, pb, 86pp
Appleton Jeanview full entry
Reference: Macquarie Galleries exhibition catalogue.25 exhibits, no biographical information.
Publishing details: Macquarie Galleries, 1949, 4pp
Ref: 1000
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: Macquarie Galleries exhibition catalogue.14 exhibits, no biographical information.
Publishing details: Macquarie Galleries, 1959, 4pp
Ref: 1000
Reinhardt Kenview full entry
Reference: Ken Reinhardt at the Bonython Gallery 1972, essay by Elwyn Lynn, 48 exhibits, biographical information
Publishing details: Bonython Gallery, 1972, 12pp
Ref: 137
Lewitt Vivienne Sharkview full entry
Reference: Ros Oxley9 Gallery catalogue. 10 exhibits, biographical information
Publishing details: Ros Oxley9 Gallery, 2001, 4pp,
Ref: 223
Nude in Australian Art Theview full entry
Reference: The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
Ref: 137
Boileau Patricview full entry
Reference: see The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
May Edwardview full entry
Reference: see The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
Reddington Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
Shaw Michaelview full entry
Reference: see The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
Szegeti Imreview full entry
Reference: see The Nude in Australian Art, exhibition catalogue, Gallery A. 40 works. No illustrations or biographical information. Artists include John Bell, Charles Blackman, Patrick Boileau, Arthur Boys, John Brack, Mike Brown, William Dobell, Drysdale, Feuerring, Friend, Gleeson, Haefliger, Kenneth Hood, Larter, Norman Lindsay, Lymburner, Rosemary Madigan, Edward May, Godfrey Miller, Molvig, Murch, Justin O’Brien, John Perceval, Powditch, Charles Reddington, Michael Shaw, Sibley, Jeffrey Smart, Imre Szegeti, Frater.
Publishing details: Gallery A, Sydney, nd.
Borgelt Marionview full entry
Reference: Bloodlines, essay by Stephen Todd, illustrated, biographical information.
Publishing details: Sherman Galleries, 1996, 6-page folding card
Ref: 137
Borgelt Marionview full entry
Reference: Tapestry of detail, essay by artist, biographical information.
Publishing details: Sherman Galleries, 1998, 6-page folding card
Ref: 137
Beard Johnview full entry
Reference: Wanganui Heads, essay by Wayne Tunnicliffe
Publishing details: NERAM, 1999,
Ref: 223
Atkins Peterview full entry
Reference: Sherman Galleries exhibition catalogue - Accumulation. Essay by Simeon Kronenberg. Biographical information. Illustrated, 20 exhibits.
Publishing details: Sherman Galleries, 1996
Ref: 46
Armanious Hanyview full entry
Reference: Hammer - Hany Armanious. Essay and biographical details

Publishing details: Sarah Cottier Gallery (?), 2001, 6pp
Ref: 137
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: Fabricated Rooms, AGNSW catalogue, Contemporary Projects, essay by Stephen O’Connell
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1997, 6pp
Ref: 137
Tuckson Tonyview full entry
Reference: Breakthrough into Abstraction, 25 works, illustrations, includes price list
Publishing details: Watters Gallery, 2001, 16pp
Ref: 137
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: Aspects of the Work of John Perceval 1947 - 1968, Clune Galleries catalogue, 38 exhibits, 4 illustrations, very brief biography.
Publishing details: Clune Galleries, 1968
Ref: 137
Smart Sallyview full entry
Reference: X-Ray Vanitas
Publishing details: The Art Gallery, Praran, 1989
Ref: 1000
Brassil Joanview full entry
Reference: Starnger Companion
Publishing details: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, 1985
Ref: 1000
Boyd Guyview full entry
Reference: Sculpture in Bronze, Dominion Galleries, Montreal, Canada exhibition catalogue, lists artist’s exhibitions and public collections. Biography and illustrations of 8 works
Publishing details: Dominion Galleries, Montreal, Canada, nd [1976?], 12pp
Ref: 137
Pinson Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Pinson - Paintings from Riverdale, 19 works. Brief essay.
Publishing details: Wooloomooloo Gallery, 1995 (?), 4pp
Ref: 130
Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilsonview full entry
Reference: Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilson - AGNSW Contemporary projects. Essay by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1998, 6pp
Ref: 223
Stephen Bram view full entry
Reference: see Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilson - AGNSW Contemporary projects. Essay by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1998, 6pp
Nolan Rose view full entry
Reference: see Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilson - AGNSW Contemporary projects. Essay by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1998, 6pp
Harper Melinda view full entry
Reference: see Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilson - AGNSW Contemporary projects. Essay by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1998, 6pp
Wilson Gary view full entry
Reference: see Stephen Bram, Rose Nolan, Melinda Harper, Gary Wilson - AGNSW Contemporary projects. Essay by Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1998, 6pp
Cripps Peterview full entry
Reference: Paintings and Objects, extensive essay by Sue Cramer, Director.
Publishing details: Insitute of Modern Art, 1989, 6pp
Ref: 106
Cattapan Jonview full entry
Reference: Journal Entries - includes extensive conversation with Robert Nelson. Biographical details.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1993, 6pp,
Ref: 130
Cattapan Jonview full entry
Reference: Pillars of Salt - 10 works, includes price list, essay by Donal Fitzpatrick
Publishing details: Annandale Galleries, 1994, 6pp,
Ref: 130
Cruz Mariaview full entry
Reference: Mori Gallery catalogue.
Publishing details: Mori Gallery, 1991, 8pp, includes 2 photographs attached.
Ref: 223
Backen Robynview full entry
Reference: Robyn Backen - Verge in Rain and selected works. Includes various essays.
Publishing details: AGNSW and Koln
Ref: 137
Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Mearaview full entry
Reference: Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Meara, includes essays and biographical information.
Publishing details: Woolloomooloo Galleries, 1986
Ref: 137
Willoughby Graham view full entry
Reference: see Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Meara, includes essays and biographical information.
Publishing details: Woolloomooloo Galleries, 1986
O’Meara Rhonda view full entry
Reference: see Graham Willoughby and Rhonda O’Meara, includes essays and biographical information.
Publishing details: Woolloomooloo Galleries, 1986
Bram Stephenview full entry
Reference: Stephen Bram, David Morrison. Illustrations only, no other information.
Publishing details: City Gallery, (RMIT) 1992
Ref: 223
Morrison Davidview full entry
Reference: see Stephen Bram, David Morrison. Illustrations only, no other information.
Publishing details: City Gallery, (RMIT) 1992
Ivimey Lindeview full entry
Reference: Martin Browne Gallery catalogue, extensively illustrated, with price list
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2017,
Ref: 60
Emery Troyview full entry
Reference: Martin Browne Contemporary exhibition catalogue with price list
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2017, 4pp
Ref: 223
Pyett Adam view full entry
Reference: Still life painting—Adam Pyett
20 May to 16 July 
This survey exhibition of works spanning over ten years charts Adam Pyett’s long-standing interest in the still life genre. Mining traditional subjects from leaves and flowers, transparent vessels, and skulls through to those that reflect popular culture such as drink cans and rock t-shirts, still life is the genre through which Pyett explores his primary interest, the subject of painting itself.
Publishing details: Geelong Art Gallery, 2017
Ref: 1000
Walters Leonardview full entry
Reference: see GFL, auctiuon, WA, Autumn, 2017: lot 68: LEONARD WALTERS

NEW PERTH GIRLS SCHOOL
Signed lower right by Leonard Walters and A.E. Clark (Principal Architect) and painted 1934
Monochrome watercolour
42 x 78cm
$1,800/1,800

Leonard Walters was in partnership with W.P. Meston in the signwriting company Meston and Walters
Grosvenor Alan 1925-2012view full entry
Reference: Born in Sydney, Alan Grosvenor, (1925-2012), studied in Sydney and in England. A landscape artist, he lived and painted in the Snowy Mountains area of New South Wales, Australia. [from eBay listing 21 May 2017]
Meilerts Ludmillaview full entry
Reference: Ludmilla Meilerts: Flowers, Metropolis Gallery, Geelong 2013
Publishing details: Metropolis Gallery, Geelong, 2013
Ref: 1000
Carrington T (?)view full entry
Reference: produced an image of Ned Kelly for the Australian Sketcher July 3 1880 (image dated 28.6.1880) titled ‘Ned Kelly at Bay’
Publishing details: No 101 Vol VIII
Campbell Johnview full entry
Reference: From Day Fine Art website May 29017: John Campbell (1855-1924)
St Francis Xavier Cathedral and Bishops House, Wollongong, November 1917
Oil on Canvas
40 x 65 cm
Signed and dated lower right
Campbell’s’ painting dated November 1917 is an early 20th century document of the compound that was the first base for the Catholic Church in Illawarra district. The painting depicts Saint Francis Xavier Cathedral, Xavier House, The Catholic Diocese of Wollongong and Cathedral House, painted from the corner of Crown St and Harbour Street in Wollongong. Harbour Street is an unsealed road and the Cathedral is depicted after the first renovation. (This renovation extended the building and replaced the roof with timber or slate tiles. The current Sanctuary today, was renovated and widened in 1933. (See image below)
Campbell’s interest in depicting architectural detail and old historical landmarks is obvious in his past surviving works.
His work recording St Mary’s Cathedral in Perth (Western Australia) may have prompted this painting rather than it having been painted as a commission.
It is typical Campbell in style and in composition. The juxtaposition of European architecture combined with public infrastructure (Telegraph poles and electricity cables span the painting), provide the viewer with a harmonious setting of old and new. I believe that Campbell also reveals an insight into his personality, he is at ease and interested with changes in modern technology, but there is also a sense of intrigue as to how they will interact with the past.
The glimpse of Crown street on the left of the painting, complete with an automobile, seems to be a reference to the close proximity of progression in the district.
This painting is related in style and date to several other works completed in NSW between 1916-1918.
It is thought that Campbell moved to NSW again from Perth in 1915 or 1916. Very few works between the period of 1915-1918 have come to light. Many that have survived are painted in oil, rather than watercolour. Yet his meticulous eye for detail is evident, his colour palette in paintings completed between 1915 and 1918 is similar and he seems to be painting with a watercolour technique, only he is using oils.
History of the Cathedral
The first church to be built on this site was a small wooden chapel in 1836. The original building seated 250 people, but soon became too small for functional use. The first Catholic School was opened on the site in 1838, and the pioneer priest Father John Rigney decided to build a larger permanent church in 1839. This was the first Catholic place of worship in the Illawarra district.
The church of St Francis Xavier is a stone building in the Gothic style, richly ornamented and large enough to contain 1,500 people. Its estimated cost was 2,000 Pounds.
The building was furnished in 1848 with a splendid Gothic interior. The interior has been altered over the years and apart from the beautiful stained glass window behind the sanctuary and the ceiling over the nave, little exists of the original interior.
Since the turn of the 20th century, several additions and renovations to the cathedral have been made. The first addition was opened on 6 May 1906. The nave was lengthened by 7.6m, the original shingle roof was replaced by slate. Two galleries, one on each side of the sanctuary were added.
In 1933, renovations undertaken to widen the church, significantly damaged the interior.
In 1951 St Francis Xavier’s church was designated as the Cathedral for the new Diocese of Wollongong. Alterations were made in 1960, the 1970s and in 1985. A Marian chapel was created from an old confessional. Some of the aesthetic damage done to the church with the widening of the interior was softened with the cladding of the square concrete columns; arches were added between these columns to unify the space The Stations Of the Cross were reorganised, carpet laid and the interior painted in tones selected to highlight the stained glass window.
Bishops House received a new façade in the 1960s.
Allport Mary Mortonview full entry
Reference: Mary Morton Allport & the Status of the Colonial Lady Painters. By Joan Kerr.


Publishing details: Proceedings of the Tasmanian Historical Research Association

vol.31, 1983.
Mitchell Thomasview full entry
Reference: ALAN E J ANDREWS (EDITED): STAPYLTON - WITH MAJOR MITCHELL'S AUSTRALIA FELIX EXPEDITION, 1836 LARGELY FROM THE JOURNAL OF GRANVILLE WILLIAM CHETWYND STAPYLTON,
Publishing details: Blubberhead Press, 1986, limited edition (230/1000) signed, original cloth gilt, dust wrapper
Habgood Blanche Mary nee Brownview full entry
Reference: Blanche Mary Habgood was daughter in law of the painter John Habgood and sister of the first woman in Australian parliament Edith Cowan. [Information from Dorothy Erickson who is working on a dictionary of WA Artists and Artisans and a book on women painters in WA before WWI as at May 2017].
Habgood Blanche Mary nee Brownview full entry
Reference: [Information from Dorothy Erickson who is working on a dictionary of WA Artists and Artisans and a book on women painters in WA before WWI as at May 2017].
Ogden Dennisview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books online catalogue 1 June, 2017: ‘Original collage of carefully cut-out coloured papers, 595 x 397 mm, titled lower centre ‘Carlton & United Breweries Ltd / Melbourne Victoria Australia’, signed in pencil lower right ‘Dennis Ogden 83’.
A stunning modernist design, of two young men enjoying a beverage on St Kilda Pier, Melbourne, with the historic kiosk (sadly burnt down in 2003) in the background. While created in the eighties, through the use of a vintage font and modernist style, the advertisement has a distinctly forties feel to it.’

Boosey W (and T)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books online catalogue 1 June, 2017: ‘[SHEET MUSIC] Dr. Leichhardt’s March, for the piano, composed on the successful termination of his Expedition, after having traversed a distance of nearly 3000 miles through a portion of Australia, hitherto untrodden by civilized man, by his friend, S. H. March. London : T. Boosey & Co., [circa 1846]. Folio, lithographed title page [verso blank] with a scene of the expedition drawn by W. Boosey, slip cancel “for the piano” replacing “for the harp” (as in other copies); pp [1 blank], 2-5, [1 blank]; four leaves in total; occasional foxing, paper spine; a very good copy of this rare sheet music.
Following his successful overland expedition which traversed northern Australia from the Darling Downs to Port Essington (October 1844 to December 1845), Ludwig Leichhardt arrived back in Sydney by the ship Heroine on 25 March 1846. Leichhardt’s close friend Stephen Hale Marsh, a gifted harpist and pianist, composed two pieces of music to celebrate the explorer’s triumphant return: Dr. Leichhardt’s March and The Traveller’s Return. Two versions of Dr. Leichhardt’s March are known: one composed for the harp, the other for the piano. The same title page was utilised for both versions, which explains the slip cancel on the title leaf of the present and other known copies of the piano version.
Marsh, whose sister had married the colonial artist John Skinner Prout, emigrated to Australia in 1842. It was on the outward voyage that he and Leichhardt met and became firm friends. In Sydney, Leichhardt was later invited by Marsh to lodge at his residence. Leichhardt adjudged Dr. Leichhardt’s March ‘extraordinarily beautiful’. The sheet music was printed in London and features a wonderful lithographic illustration of Leichhardt’s expedition party.
The National Library of Australia and the State Library of New South Wales hold the only two copies of Dr. Leichhardt’s March, for the piano recorded in Australian collections, while the National Library also holds the only copy of the version for harp.
Reference: Neidorf in Binns (editor) Music Printing and Publishing in Australia, pp 43, 49.


Lee Laurenceview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books online catalogue 1 June, 2017: ‘A significant unofficial photographic record of the Western Front in 1918, taken with a private camera by a young Australian soldier from Perth; a total of 267 photographs contained in four albums.
Private Laurence Lee, 7994, 16th Battalion, 27th Reinforcement, A.I.F., a labourer from Western Australia, enlisted at Perth on 29 August 1917, at the age of 19. His unit embarked at Fremantle on the troopship SS Canberra, on 23 November 1917, bound for Southampton. Private Lee spent 1918 with his unit in the living hell that was the Somme. With his own Kodak camera he recorded for posterity this horrific experience, as well as the victory celebrations in Amiens and his happy return home to Australia on HMAT Pakeha.
Album 1. Small oblong quarto, 145 x 190 mm, original cloth boards. Private Lee’s ownership inscription to front pastedown, with his full regimental details. Contains 96 window-mounted (removable) snapshot photographs taken by Private Lee, dimensions of each 50 x 65 mm, numbered 1-96 and captioned; scenes of destruction and captured German armaments at numerous locations on the Somme, including Villers-Bretonneux, Framerville, Guillaucourt, Rosieres, Vaire Wood, Rainecourt, Chaulnes, Sailly-Laurette, and Hamel; the last photos in the album are scenes of Peace Day in Amiens and on board HMAT Pakeha, on the return voyage to Australia.
Album 2. Small oblong quarto, 145 x 220 mm, original card covers. Contains 48 window-mounted (removable) snapshot photographs taken by Private Lee, dimensions of each 50 x 65 mm, numbered 97-144 and captioned; further documentation of scenes of battle, prisoners of war, a bombing party, a French sweetheart etc., taken at various locations on the Somme, including Villers-Bretonneux, Bouzincourt, Framerville, Vaux-sur-Somme and Bonnay; scenes around Sutton Veny camp in Wiltshire.
Album 3. Small oblong quarto, 160 x 240 mm, original card covers. Private Lee’s ownership inscription to front pastedown, with his full regimental details. Contains 45 window-mounted (removable) snapshot photographs taken by Private Lee, dimensions of each 50 x 65 mm, numbered 145-192 (3 of the 48 are missing) and captioned; scenes in Cape Town, Le Havre, Southampton and Amiens; no. 4 Company AGD at work; ruins at Villers-Bretonneux, destroyed tanks etc.
Album 4. Small oblong quarto, 140 x 220 mm, original card covers (upper cover detached). Contains 78 window-mounted (removable) snapshot photographs taken by Private Lee, dimensions of each 50 x 65 mm, the first 52 are numbered (193-244) and captioned; German prisoners; memorial to the Australian fallen at Villers-Bretonneux; Cape Town; on board HMAT Pakeha, including portraits of his mates in drag; scenes back home in Western Australia, including a rare shot of the crash of the West Australian Airways Bristol 28 Tourer, G-AUDI, near Murchison River on its inaugural flight on 5 December 1921.’
Wyatt William 1838-1872view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books online catalogue 1 June, 2017: WYATT, William (1838-1872)
Natives Encamped - [South Australia], 1862. Title from artist’s caption. Ink wash on wove paper, 80 x 180 mm; initialled and dated lower right ‘W.W. 62’; in fine condition, mounted in a recent glazed timber frame.
William Wyatt, sketcher, watercolourist and lithographer, was born in the Colony of South Australia in 1838, the son of William Wyatt (Senior), surgeon, landowner and public servant (1804-1886) and his wife Julia, née Matthews. In spite of his short career – he died in 1872 at the age of 33 or 34 – a number of examples of his work have survived, most notably a group of pen and ink drawings contained in a sketchbook dated 1857, which is held in the National Library of Australia (PIC Drawer 8632 #R11313). Among the drawings in the sketchbook, which was included in the National Library of Australia’s 2003 exhibition Travellers’ Art, are five depictions of traditional Aboriginal lifestyle – for example, camping, dancing and spear throwing – similar to the drawing we offer here. A handful of other works by Wyatt, including watercolours and lithographs, are held in the National Library of Australia, State Library of South Australia and State Library of New South Wales.
Wyatt’s Natives Encamped depicts a group of three men and two women seated or reclining beside a camp fire outside their wurley, a shelter constructed from timber, grass and bark. The man approaching on the left has arrived from hunting, and carries over his shoulder what appears to be a small wallaby. None of the subjects wears any European apparel. The landscape – an alluvial plain with low hills in the distance – suggests a location somewhere near the Murray River. Coincidentally, in the same year that Wyatt drew this scene from life, the photographer George Burnell was the first to capture the vanishing traditional lifestyle of the Aborigines of the Murray River on film, in his stunning series Stereoscopic Views of the River Murray (Adelaide, 1862).’
Forrest Charles Lieutenant (1809-1874)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books online catalogue 1 June, 2017: FORREST, Charles, Lieutenant (1809-1874)
Pencil drawing depicting a scene on the Yarra, Melbourne, circa 1870. Leaf from an artist’s sketchbook, 230 x 285 mm, unsigned; in fine condition, in an archival mat; verso of leaf with an unfinished pencil sketch by the same artist, depicting early settlers and wooden dwellings in the Australian bush; affixed to the back of the mat is the following typed declaration by a descendant of the artist, referring to the first work: ‘This is to certify that this Drawing was handed down to me from the Estate of my Great Grandfather – Lt. Charles Forrest, and is a work by his hand. Signed – C.S. Sinclair (Cliff Sinclair)’.
This drawing, made by a competent amateur artist, Lieutenant Charles Forrest (1809-1874), depicts a scene on the Yarra River. Sketched in situ, probably from the southern bank in the vicinity of Punt Road, the view is dominated by a large tree in the centre foreground, beneath which a young woman wearing a summer dress and holding a parasol rests against the trunk and extended bough. On the river can be seen three sets of rowers; they are not competing in a race, as they are rowing in opposite directions. On the far bank are three groups of promenading figures; just beyond them is a low fence, behind which we can see a small, detached dwelling. We can date the drawing with some confidence to around 1870, based on the young lady’s fashion.
Born in Cawnpore, India, in 1809, Lieutenant Charles Forrest was an important pioneer settler of the Prahran-Toorak district of Melbourne. He first acquired land in the area as early as 1840, and briefly served as clerk to the Protector of Aborigines in Port Phillip, George Augustus Robinson, in 1847-48. The following extract from Ian D. Clark and Laura M. Kostanski, An Indigenous History of Stonnington : A report to the City of Stonnington (School of Business, University of Ballarat, 2006) provides a concise summary of Forrest’s early years in Port Phillip; furthermore, the Charles Forrest attribution made by the authors to a drawing discussed in the report would appear to be confirmed by the striking stylistic similarity it bears to the drawing we offer here:
“During the 1970s, some eight drawings were found in storage beneath the stage of the Prahran Town Hall … Drawing # 285 is entitled ‘Robinson Black Protector – next to Miss Barker’s’ (see Figure 3.11). The drawing is of a man in a dray travelling up a curved road leading to a substantial house. Aborigines stand beneath a tree in the foreground. A pencilled annotation on the rear reads ‘Robinson Black Protector – next to Miss Barker’s’. Robinson lived at ‘Tivoli’. Miss Barker, sister of Dr Barker, also lived on the terrace. It is signed CF, possibly Charles Forrest, who was Robinson’s clerk from 1847-1848 (see Figure 3.12). A comparison of the hand writing on the rear of the drawing with those entries believed to have been entered by Charles Forrest in the Chief Protector’s Office Journal has failed to find a match. However, there is an entry in the office journal dated 12 April 1847 that confirms that Forrest was in the habit of drawing sketches, so it is plausible that CF is Charles Forrest. Charles Forrest became Robinson’s new clerk on 19 February 1847. Forrest had been the Clerk of Petty Sessions (1840-43), and had been a station holder in the Western Port District (1846-47). Forrest resigned on 20 June 1848. Forrest bought Lot 6 at the June 1840 land sales and built Waterloo Cottage at Forrest Hill (where Melbourne High School now stands) in 1841 and the Hermitage (NW corner of Chapel Street and Toorak Road) in 1843 (see Figure 3.13). He later lived in Williams Road” (ibid., pp 47-8).
A more complete account of Forrest’s career in Melbourne is found in John Butler Cooper, The history of Prahran from its first settlement to a city (Melbourne : Prahran Council, 1924). From this we learn that by around 1870 he had taken up residence in East Melbourne, where he stayed until 1872. The present drawing was probably made by Forrest while he was living there. At some point in 1872 he moved to Warragul, in Gippsland, where he remained up until his death in 1874. The unfinished scene on the verso is quite possibly a sketch made by Forrest in the Warragul area.’

Also at Leski Auctions, AUSTRALIAN & COLONIAL(#448), 24/11/2019, lot 499:
CHARLES FORREST, Lieutenant (1809 - 1874),
An untitled pencil drawing depicting a scene on the Yarra River, Melbourne, circa 1870.
A leaf from an artist's sketchbook, 23 x 28.5cm, unsigned; verso of leaf with an
unfinished sketch of early settlers and huts in the bush. Affixed to the back of the 
mounting is a typed statement: "This is to certify that this Drawing was handed down
to me from the Estate of my Great Grandfather - Lt. Charles Forrest, and is a work
by his hand. Signed C.S. Sinclair. 
Born in Cawnpore, India, Forrest was an important early settler on the Prahran-Toorak district of Melbourne.
He acquired land in the area as early as 1840, and briefly served as clerk to the Protector of Aborigines
in Port Phillip


Bush Stephenview full entry
Reference: Claiming : An Installation of Paintings by Stephen Bush
Publishing details: Melbourne : Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1991. Quarto, yellow pictorial wrappers, pp 12. Illustrated in black and white with three accompanying essays. Limited to 1500 copies.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Roseview full entry
Reference: Enough. Rose Nolan’s work is held in the National Gallery of Victoria, the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Art Gallery of South Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art (Sydney), and Heide Museum of Modern Art.
 
‘‘One of a group of Australian artists who formed a loose association around the experimental and innovative Store 5 artist-run space in Melbourne between 1989 and 1993, Rose Nolan’s work traverses forms and ideals founded in utopian strands of twentieth-century avant-gardism’. – Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia, website.
 

Publishing details: Melbourne : Negative Press, 2016. Artist’s book. Octavo (folded), 220 x 840 mm (open), initialled and dated on rear in pencil. A concertina style publication, employing the creases to define the characters in a similar manner to the artist’s acclaimed wall drawings. Published in a limited edition of 100 copies.
R
Ref: 1000
Reed W Gview full entry
Reference: see Davidsons Auction: lot 4. REED, W G (2)

2 Views of Cedar being Loaded, NSW North Coast, 1882.
W/Clr & Gouache (2)
34x49.5cm (each)
Lot Number: 4
Sale date: 04-Jun-17
$1000.00 - $3000.00
[Large, detailed and reasonably competent watercolours]
Blackman Barbaraview full entry
Reference: All My Januaries. Pleasures of life and other essays, by Barbara Blackman. St. Barbara Blackman reflects on her life as a muse & iconic Australian arts identity. From her childhood in Brisbane, to her marriage to artist Charles Blackman, life in London & Paris & beyond.’
Publishing details: Uni of Queensland Press. 2016. Col.Ill. wrapps. 253pp.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: CHARLES BLACKMAN. Exhibition Catalogue. .
Publishing details: Savill Galleries. 2000. Folio. Col.Ill.wrapps. unpag. (12pp.) Profusely illustrated in colour. Annotated with prices.
Ref: 1000
Williams Florence 1833-1915view full entry
Reference: See Sotheby’s Australia, Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design,  21 Jun 2017: lot 199, FLORENCE WILLIAMS
1833-1915
The Fortune in the Cup 1880
oil on card
signed, dated and inscribed verso
24.7 x 30.8 cm
Provenance
Private Collection, New South Wales
Private Collection, New South Wales, gift from the above
Friend Mary Anne 1800-1838view full entry
Reference: See Sotheby’s Australia, Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design,  21 Jun 2017: lot 244, Attributed to MARY ANN FRIEND
Georgetown Lighthouse, Tasmania, watercolour; together with two flower studies attributed to Mary Ann Friend
Estimate $3,000 - $5,000
watercolour on paper
16 x 17.8 cm
two flower studies attributed to Mary Ann Friend
watercolour on paper
13.8 x 3 cm and 8 x 5.3 cm
Halpern Deborahview full entry
Reference: Arthouse Gallery invite - 1 large illustration including portrait with biography
Publishing details: June 2017, 2pp
Ref: 117
Arago Jacquesview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue June 2017: Original pen and ink sketch, captioned "L'Intérieur d'un ménage, à Coupang"...
ARAGO, Jacques.
Timor: during the expedition of the Uranie, 1818.
Fine pen and ink sketch, the image 198 x 265 mm., on laid paper; pencil note "Mr. Arago" in Freycinet's later hand at bottom left; framed.
Beautiful original sketch drawn on the Uranie expedition by Freycinet's official artist

Fine sketch of a scene in Timor, drawn by Jacques Arago during the visit of the Freycinet expedition in late 1818. Arago's observations on Timor were acute, and he is known to have toured and made sketches in both the wealthy Chinese and Malay quarters (commenting that the latter "consists of hovels"). A series of his Timor scenes were later included in the official Freycinet voyage account, but this scene was not made into an engraving and is in fact otherwise unrecorded.

Jacques Etienne Arago (1790-1855) was the official artist on Freycinet's voyage, and is known for the witty and caustic account he later wrote as much as for his fine sketches. Arago was the third of four brothers who excelled in diverse professions, the most notable being his eldest brother François, a scientist and politician. Arago's undoubted artistic ability attracted the attention of the naval authorities who chose him for the demanding role of draughtsman for the Freycinet expedition. By all accounts a charming, gregarious and eccentric man, these attributes stood him in good stead during the voyage, and are reflected in the sketches he made.

As with many other Arago drawings relating to the voyage, this was evidently given to Freycinet, as it is his handwriting that signs the picture "Mr. Arago" at bottom left. Freycinet is known to have retained a large number of voyage images by both Arago and his colleague Pellion, which would have been surrendered to him as both commander and official chronicler of the voyage. It is interesting to note that Arago's famous scene of Rose going ashore at Timor, sold by us in our Baudin & Flinders catalogue (2010, no. 69), has almost identical borders and annotations, as did his sketch of a man of Timor (no. 81).
Fairholme George Knight Erskine.view full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue June 2017: Views of Australia…
FAIRHOLME, George Knight Erskine.
The settlement of Brisbane and the Darling Downs; rare pictorial records.

George Fairholme (1822-1889), artist, explorer and squatter arrived in Sydney from Scotland in 1839 and with young Scottish friends began the long and pioneering trek into Queensland. He settled at South Toolburra on the Darling Downs staying until 1852. This was the very beginning of white settlement at Brisbane and the Darling Downs and this young squatter is remembered as "a very intelligent gentlemanly man, the most intelligent of any of the squatters" (Henry Stoubart). The eleven lithographs offered include a view of Brisbane showing the first houses to be built. Privately printed by the artist on his return to Europe, as Fifteen views of Australia in 1845 by G.K.E.F., these views were intended for family and friends and are exceptionally rare. The only known complete work is held in family papers at the Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales. The set offered here corresponds to the holdings in the National Library of Australia for ten of the prints but includes an eleventh, "King Georges Sound W. Australia"; this lithograph may date from Fairholme's voyage to Australia in 1838.

Fairholme sketched daily life in Australia. He had been well educated before arriving to start life on the land and whilst at Rugby School had learned to draw under the English artist Edward Pretty. The 1840s and 50s "were the golden age of horsemanship in Brisbane... and these drawings show the Leslies and the Leith-Hays at Canning Downs and South Toolburra as they brand their calves in the stockade and load the wool-packs onto drays to bring the wool clip down to Brisbane Town" (Susanna Evans Historic Brisbane, p.26). In 1852, Fairholme together with Arthur Hodgson as leaders of the Committee of the Moreton Bay and Northern Districts Separation Association organised an historic meeting in Brisbane to confirm that all the leading squatters of the Darling Downs district supported "the ultimate separation of the Northern districts of New South Wales". It took a further seven years for separation from New South Wales to be achieved and by this time Fairholme had returned to Scotland so did not witness the beginning of Queensland's independence in which he had played an embryonic role.

The explorer Ludwig Leichardt records that in 1844 he accompanied Fairholme on an expedition is search of fossil bones and to collect botanical specimens and the two men became friends. This friendship influenced Fairholme who went on to travel to the German cities described to him by Leichhardt. It was on this European expedition, a far cry from the Australian outback, that he met and married Baroness Pauline Poellnitz-Frankenberg in 1857 living for the rest of his life at the Castle of Wellenau in Austria, never to return to Australia.
Publishing details: London: undated but all circa 1853.
Eleven black and white lithographs: numbers 1-5 and 7-9 approx 255 x 330 mm (matted size) and 2 approx 280 x 375 mm (conforming to those prepared for "Fifteen views of Australia in 1845 by G.K.E.F.") and one view approx 250 x 325 mm titled 'King George's Sound W. Australia, Printed by R. Appel's Anastatic Press'; unbound, housed in a blue cloth solander case.

Ham Thomasview full entry
Reference: see see Hordern House catalogue June 2017: The Gold Diggers Portfolio…
HAM, Thomas (engraver and publisher).

Complete copy of the Ham Portfolio
A classic illustrated work on the goldfields, combining images by several significant artists. As Wantrup notes, 'Most of these plates are unsigned but are the work of David Tulloch, William Strutt, George Strafford and Thomas Ham himself. A few years later Cyrus Mason, another Melbourne publisher of lithographs, issued the portfolio under the same title and date but with his own imprint and with the plates lithographed on thinner paper of slightly larger size. The images in the two editions are substantially the same, although some of the images were redrawn for the Mason edition. Mason apparently continued to issue the portfolio over a number of years since plates are known with the imprint of the succeeding firm of Stringer, Mason & Co.
MORE
Provenance: Private collection (Sydney).
Ferguson, 10178 (1854 edition); Wantrup, 254b.
Price (AUD): $5,850.00  other currencies     Ref: #4504465
Condition Report

         
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Publishing details: Melbourne: Cyrus Mason, "1854" [actually c.1859].
Small quarto, the fourteen lithograph plates in excellent condition with large margins, gathered together with a simple spine and loosely contained in a later leather portfolio binding, with an old typed listing of the plates, and with the original gold-on-white front titling wrapper (somewhat damaged) trimmed to margins and laid down on a blank leaf.

Shipley Conwayview full entry
Reference: Sketches in the Pacific… with 26 tinted or coloured lithograph plates including the illustrated title, additional lithographed dedication leaf and two pages of facsimile signatures of the Tahitian Royal Family; original blue cloth with ornate gilt decorated titling inlay at centre of the front board.
Superb lithographs of Pitcairn Island
Scarce and desirable: one of the great illustrated books of the South Pacific, forming an invaluable record of Pitcairn and Tahiti during the mid-nineteenth century. Born in 1824, Conway Mordant Shipley was nephew of the gallant captain of the same name (his uncle acquired rank and reputation during the Napoleonic wars and died prematurely whilst rashly boarding a French corvette). The younger Shipley enjoyed a more relaxed naval career aboard the Calypso, departing Valparaiso in February 1848 and cruising the South Pacific, stopping at Pitcairn, Tahiti, Samoa and Fiji.
MORE
Provenance: Private collection (Sydney).
Abbey, Travel, 601; Ferguson, 15656a; Hill, 1564; Kroepelien, 1189; O'Reilly-Reitman, 1125.

see see Hordern House catalogue June 2017:

Publishing details: London: T. McLean, 1851.
Folio,
Ref: 1000
Grier Louis 1864-1920view full entry
Reference: Catalogue of a small collection of pictures by Louis Grier (held at the old Athenaeum Club, opposite Vienna Cafe).
Publishing details: Melbourne : Mason, Firth &​ McCutcheon, 1892. 8 p. ; 15 cm. (photocopy in Scheding Library)
Ref: 16
Grier E Wylyview full entry
Reference: See Catalogue of a small collection of pictures by Louis Grier (held at the old Athenaeum Club, opposite Vienna Cafe). There was one work, catalogue 16, by E Wyly Grier titled ‘Bereft’. The catalogue states that it had been awarded a gold medal at the Paris Salon in 1890.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Mason, Firth &​ McCutcheon, 1892. 8 p. ; 15 cm.
Grier Louisview full entry
Reference: St Ives Arts Club: Louis Grier was an active member of the Club for over 30yrs although he never held office on the Committee.

Shaw Georgeview full entry
Reference: Shaw, George & Sowerby, James. Zoology of New Holland, [1998. Originally published 1794]

Publishing details: Friends of the State Library of South Australia, Adelaide, 1998, Limited edn of 600, includes folio of The Plates limited edn ed. 157/200,
Ref: 1000
Soweby Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Shaw, George & Sowerby, James. Zoology of New Holland, [1998],

Publishing details: Friends of the State Library of South Australia, Adelaide, 1998, Limited edn of 600, includes folio of The Plates limited edn ed. 157/200,
Hunt Charles Henryview full entry
Reference: see GARDINER HOULGATE auction 29 June 2017, lot 893: Charles Henry Hunt (1857-1938) - Art Deco travel poster for 'The Hydro-Majestic Hotel', Medlow Bath', printed by Bloxham & Chambers Ltd, Sydney, colour print, 28" x 38", framed
The poster was printed in the early 20th Century by Bloxham & Chambers of Sydney Australia and depicts the world famous Hydro Majestic Hotel in Medlow Bath set in the Blue Mountains overlooking the Megalong Valley, the hotel was the brain child of the Australian Retail Entrepreneur Mark Foy in 1902, and it is believed to have had its own generated electricity before Sydney itself.
This poster shows the hotel in all its original Art Deco glory before the great bush fire of 1922 which destroyed the Belgravia Wing. Although the centre dome is known as the Casino it has never seen any gambling since its installation and now serves as the Grand Ballroom, but always was the Hotel Reception, the domed structure was dismantled and exported in from Chicago by Mark Foy in 1900 and rebuilt by 1903.
This current poster was purchased by auction following on from the closure of Sydney's Ned Kelly's Restaurant in the late 1980s where it hung for many years.
The hotel re-opened after many years of closure in 2014.
Marchais Pierre-Antoineview full entry
Reference: ATTRIBUTED TO PIERRE-ANTOINE MARCHAIS (1763-1859)
Aborigines in Landscape
watercolour
19 x 26.5 cm

PROVENANCE
Christie's, The Freycinet Collection, London, 26 September 2002, lot 95
Art and Design in Western Australiaview full entry
Reference: Art and Design in Western Australia: Perth Technical College 1900-2000. By Dorothy Erickson. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Perth: Central Metropolitan College of TAFE, 2000, p. 23.

Ref: 1009
Western Australian artview full entry
Reference: see Art and Design in Western Australia: Perth Technical College 1900-2000. By Dorothy Erickson.
Publishing details: Perth: Central Metropolitan College of TAFE, 2000, p. 23.

Armstrong Kittyview full entry
Reference: see Erickson, Dorothy, “Profiling Australian Artists: Kitty Armstrong” Collectables Trader no 109 May-June 2013, pp. 50-52.

Australian gold and silversmithsview full entry
Reference: Erickson, Dorothy. Gold and Silversmithing in Western Australia: A History.
Publishing details: Perth: UWAP, 2010.
Ref: 1000
china paintingview full entry
Reference: Thomson, John. “A History of China Painting in WA.”
Publishing details: slwa Ms b3509217 1.

Ref: 1000
Bromfield Davidview full entry
Reference: Bromfield David. Now and Then: A Hundred Years of Art and Design in Western Australia ex cat. 2000.


Publishing details: Newsquest May 1994 p. 4-5 BL378.9411/NEW, 2000
Ref: 1000
Absolon John de Mansfieldview full entry
Reference: Zimmer, Jenny “John de Mansfield Absolon” in Early Days vol. 9, no 2 (1984), pp. 27-37.

Ref: 1000
Mount Nickview full entry
Reference: Nick Mount - The Fabric of Work by Tony Hanning. [’Nick Mount is one of the world's leading glass artists. In his sixtieth year he was honoured with a major exhibition in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as well as the Object Living Treasure Award. This book, written in the style of an extraordinary yarn, is not so much about Nick Mount's achievements as a glass artist as it is about the elements that have shaped his career and continue to inform his work. His philosophy, work ethic and environment, peers and family have all been factors in his work and success. Together they form the fabric of his work. Nick Mount has received numerous awards, including the Bavarian State Prize in Germany, an Australia Council Fellowship, and the Arts SA Triennial Project Grant. He acknowledges the honour of being able to work with his hands, and has enormous gratitude for a lifetime of assistance from Dr and Mrs G.J. Mount, Pauline, Hugo, Peta and Pip. Nick Mount The Fabric of Work is richly illustrated with photographs of Nick's pieces, including many made recently. These vibrant works range from the extraordinary flamboyant scent bottles to more recent wood and glass fruit pieces that reflect a lush quietude.’]
Publishing details: Wakefield Press, 2012, 136pp, pb
Ref: 1000
Morton Callumview full entry
Reference: Callum Morton - In Memoriam, edited by Linda Michael.[’"This exhibition draws from almost twenty years of work by Callum Morton, a Melbourne artist with a significant international profile whose art explores the personal and social impact of architecture and our built environment. From early drawings of fires and explosions on housing commission flats, to bullet-holed Screens, Awnings and Monuments that memorialise the serial deaths of capitalism and outdated forms of modernity, Morton’s works present a melancholic urban archaeology. He salvages fragments and alters them through camouflage, destruction, the overlaying of sound, and changes of scale, location and material. The highly ambivalent objects that result make us think about the relationship between art and life, history and the present, and look again at the ubiquitous structures we see but rarely notice."--Publisher website.]

Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2011. 73pp
Ref: 1000
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: John Olsen : the You Beaut Country / edited by David Hurlston and Deborah Edwards.
Also Titled You Beaut Country by
Hurlston, David, (editor.)
Edwards, Deborah, (editor.)
Hart, Deborah, 1959-
Murphy, John.
Martin, Matthew.
Olsen, Tim.
Walker, Sue.
[’The most comprehensive display ever mounted on one of Australia’s greatest living artists
This exhibition surveys John Olsen’s remarkable seven-decade career, including paintings, ceramics, tapestries and works on paper from collections across Australia.
It features some of his most iconic and arresting works, including large-scale paintings of Sydney Harbour and Lake Eyre and his career-defining landscape series The you beaut country.
Olsen is renowned for his energetic painting style and his lyrical depictions of the Australian landscape and its life-forms. The exhibition traces the development of his spectacular and idiosyncratic vision, highlighting his lifelong interest in the natural world and his continued pursuit to capture the Australian identity.
A National Gallery of Victoria exhibition in association with the Art Gallery of NSW.
‘]

Publishing details: National Gallery of Victoria, 2016. 217pp
Ref: 1009
Places of the Heartview full entry
Reference: Places of the heart : memorials in Australia by Paul Ashton, Paula Hamilton and Rose Searby. [’This book charts the transformation of Australian ways of mourning over the last forty years through a study of memorial stones particular means by which those who live on commemorate the dead. It explores the reasons memorials are set up and how they are used by those who visit them.’] To be indexed
Publishing details: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2012.
Ref: 1009
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: Discovering Dobell by Christopher Heathcote. [’Discovering Dobell delves into the riveting, yet humble, narrative of an aspiring artist hailing from New South Wales. Sir William Dobell challenges mediums and pushes the boundaries of his works, captured beautifully in this inspiring text. Although Dobell’s pieces reflect a theme of tragedy and loss, Heathcote is able to draw out the beauty and truly capture the essence of his works. Dobell has the unique ability to adapt his technique when creating the character in subject, seizing the crux of said subject and letting it flourish into his art. This talent allows viewers to really see the emotion and meaning behind his works.
From concepts and sketches to fully developed pieces poured over for months or years, Dobell pursued art until the end of his life. He thrived every second of it.’]
[’Heathcote’s passionate analysis into the world of Sir WIlliam Dobell provides fresh insight to Dobell’s pieces. His exploration of Dobell, among others, prove that he is willing to go in depth to prove to others the gripping true tales of what it takes to become someone. Heathcote’s distinct talent for weaving together a stunning narrative from scraps of knowledge show time and time again that cinderella stories can spring from anywhere.
‘]
Publishing details: Wakefield Press in association with TarraWarra Museum of Arts Mile End, SA/ Healesville, Vic 2017 , 112pp
Montford Paulview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Mackennal Bertramview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Gilbert Charles Webbview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Australian sculptureview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Australian sculptureview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Allen Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Armstrong Bruceview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ball Percevalview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bartlett Geoffreyview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Baskerville Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bass Tomview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bowles William Leslieview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Coles Willview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Corlett Peterview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Dadswell Lyndonview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Couzens Vickiview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Dall’Ava Augustineview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Daniel Lynchview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Durrant Ivanview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Evans George de Lacy architectview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ewers Rayview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Foley Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Greener Isaacview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Halpern Deborahview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Irving Pamelaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Junky Projectsview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Juraszek Paulview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Kelly Johnview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
King Ingeview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
King Virginiaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Laumen Louisview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Lee Penelopeview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Matthews Leighview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Mauriks Adrianview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Meadmore Clementview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Meszaros Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Morton Callumview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Murray-White Cliveview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Nelson Simeonview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
O’Connor Ailsaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
O’Loughlin Christineview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Parr Lentonview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Pryor Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Doudney Ericview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Patching Ericview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Oliver Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Porchelli Pietroview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Quinn Paulview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Quinn Lorettaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Redpath Normaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Richardson Charles Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ringholt Stuartview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robb Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robertson-Swann Ronview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Rockman Irvinview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Romanis Glennview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robinson John Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Roneri Giuseppiview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Scarce Yhonnieview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Skipper Matchemview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Spronk Petrusview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Stevens Candyview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Stimson Mary Perrotview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Summers Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Thomas Rayview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Thompson Kimbaview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Thorneycroft William Hamoview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Weaver Alisonview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
White Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Zananiri Saryview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Wilson Ambroseview full entry
Reference: see SLNSW: King Bungaree 1829 Sydney, By Wilson, Ambrose. From the collection of the State Library of New South Wales [a1114016 / SAFE/PXA 615, 20] (Mitchell Library)
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: Description of a View of the Town of Sydney, New South Wales; the Harbour of Port Jackson, and surrounding Country; now Exhibiting in the Panorama, Leicester Square - Painted by the Proprietor, Robert Burford.

Artist: Augustus Earle (1793 - 1838)
Engraver: Robert Burford (1791 - 1861)
270mm x 388mm. Lithograph,

The following information from the Antique Print Room, Sydney:

‘In February 1827 Augustus Earle painted a series of eight detailed watercolour views of Sydney from Palmer's Hill and sent them to Robert Burford for his panorama of Sydney that was exhibited in the 'Panorama', Strand, London, in 1828 and at 'the principal towns of England' in 1829. There is an extensive key below the two images, identifying many of the main points of interest, including '19. King Bungaree', who is seen walking in the foreground of the top panorama, saluting the Governor as he rides past.

Augustus Earle (1793-1838)
Earle reached Hobart in 1825 on the Admiral Cockburn after being rescued from the remote island of Tristan da Cunha, and spent three years in Australia painting portraits of ‘exclusives’, landscapes and the Aborigines. He spent four months in Van Diemen’s Land and then left in May 1825 for Sydney.
There he quickly established himself as the colony’s leading artist and on the 8 July 1826, Earle advertised the opening of his art gallery at 10 George Street, Sydney, where he offered painting lessons and ‘a large assortment of every description of articles used in Drawing, Painting &c.’ as well as his own pictures. In August 1826 Earle was given a lithographic press by the astronomer James Dunlop that had been brought out by Governor Brisbane, which was probably the first lithographic press in the colony. Earle’s first lithographic attempt was a portrait of the Sydney Aborigine Bungaree. By November he had published the first part of his lithographed views of Sydney, Views in Australia and the second part was issued the following month.
Earle’s views were not a success as no further parts were issued as had been his original intention. There are three known sets of the Sydney printing of these lithographs, all are in institutional collections. On 20 October 1827 he sailed for New Zealand on board the Governor Macquarie, with a view to record its landscape and inhabitants. Thought to be the first professional European artist to take up residence in that country, he stayed for six months, returning to Sydney on board the same vessel on 5 May 1828. On 12 October he left New South Wales forever, embarking on The Rainbow bound for the Caroline Islands.
Back in London in 1829, Earle published his set of lithographic Views in New South Wales, and Van Diemen’s Land (1830). Although more successful than his colonial attempt, all of Earle’s lithographs are extremely rare.’
Publishing details: London: J. and C. Adlard, 1830. c1829, with twelve page description.

Ref: 1000
Maegraith Kerwinview full entry
Reference: As Kerwin Maegraith sees Celebrities in Caricature, verses by Henry Pryce, A tribute meaning no offence, To men of worth and commonsense, Though you, mayhap, are not inside, Some friend will be, so you’re implied. Compiled by H. S. McEntire, [’Celebrities in caricature : on the occasion of The Royal Tour & R.A. Show 1927.’]
Publishing details: Magazine Programmes, Pty, 32 Elizabeth Street, Sydney, [1927]
Ref: 1009
Maegraith Kerwinview full entry
Reference: The Autobiography of Kerwin Maegraith
by Kerwin Maegraith, David Maegraith (Editor) [’ Meet the man who knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
For the first time, his unique moments with those legends mentioned above, plus H. G. Wells, Bradman, Melba and many others, are brought together.
This is a collection of an artist's recollections. It is, in black and white, the art and times of Kerwin Maegraith.’] [’Meet the Author
Kerwin Maegraith was a famous Australian black and white artist.
He knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
Maegraith was a former member of the staff of Sunday Times, Sydney, Sydney Daily Mirror, and Adelaide Advertiser; caricatures in Sydney Bulletin, Sporting and Dramatic, The Bystander, The Sketch, Daily Herald (London), Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph.
Toured England with [Australian Cricket] Test Team in 1934; War Artist attached to 1st Aircraft Carrier Squadron, British Pacific Fleet. First artist to picturegram [fax] sporting cartoons from Cricket Test Matches in Australia to London Daily Mail; creator of radio-cartoons Who's Zoo series; wrote book and lyrics of musical play It Ain't Cricket. Publications: Celebrities in Caricature, Who's Who in Adelaide, Our Arborosities, Wigs and Wags.’]
Publishing details: CreateSpace Publishing, 2011, 32pp
Maegraith Kerwinview full entry
Reference: WIGS AND WAGS
A volume of FUN, FACTS & FACES
about our Railways. 60 Cartoons
by Kerwin Maegraith

A little book of cartoons of railway officials has been prepared by Mr. Kerwin Maegraith, the proceeds of the sale will be devoted to charity. As the title of the book indicates, the characters (all the principal railway officials)  have been treated humorously. Under each figure a jingling rhyme has been placed, referring to the victim in clever fun, drawing upon the duties and hobbies of the officials for material. The book is commended by the Railway Commissioner Mr. W.A. Webb.

[’Cartoonist, caricaturist, songwriter and radio broadcaster, was born in Adelaide. After a brilliant university career in Adelaide, his father became a Far Eastern correspondent on various newspapers but returned to Adelaide after some caustic, witty remarks were reprinted in Tokyo dailies. There he founded University College, of which he was headmaster, then unexpectedly threw up everything and moved to Coff’s Harbour with his wife and five children to manage the British-Australian Timber Mill and its 'couple of hundred’ employers that dominated the settlement. Kerwin spent his childhood there. His eldest brother, Hugh, tally clerk of the B.A.T. Timber Mill at Coff’s Harbour Jetty from the age of 15 (when Kerwin was 'about seven’), served as a lieutenant in France with the AIF, was severely wounded at Bullecourt and awarded the Military Cross in WWI; he also served in WWII. Kerwin, who was left-handed, did drawings, cartoons and (kind, flattering) caricatures that were widely published from the 1920s to the 1960s. He was especially interested in cricket and in 1934, while in England, drew sporting caricatures of the Australian XI touring cricket team for London newspapers and magazines. For this, Florence Taylor claimed, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (he was also proud that 'Three British Kings’ – Edward VIII (the Duke of Windsor), George V and George VI – had 'stood for Kerwin Maegraith to draw.’]
Publishing details: Pritchard Bros Softcover Unpaginated 1928
From The Advertiser (Adelaide SA) Friday 24th August 1928;
Ref: 1000
Maegraith Kerwinview full entry
Reference: WHO'S WHO IN ADELAIDE
WELL KNOWN PEOPLE CARICATURED BY KERWIN MACGRAITH

THERE IS A DATE OF 1930 ON ONE OF THE CARICATURES, AND THE AUSTRLIAN CRICKET TEAM OF 1930 ARE CARICATURED.
OBVIOUSLY PUBLISHED DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION.
OCTAVO SIZE, 80 PAGES.
SPORTSMEN, LAWYERS, REAL ESTATE, POLITICIANS, THEATRICAL AND RADIO IDENTITIES, FARMERS, WINE GROWERS ETC. ETC.
THERE ARE EVEN 2 WOMEN INCLUDED, BOTH ARE THEATRICAL IDENTITIES.
Publishing details: PUBLISHED BY THE ADVERTISER NEWSPAPERS LIMITED [1930s]
IN AID OF THE LORD MAYOR'S UNEMPLOYMENT FUND

Ref: 1000
Barton Halview full entry
Reference: see Wright Marshall auction, UK, 4 July, 2017, lot 506: Hal Barton (Australia, b.1927)- 'Beach Scene' Oil on panel, signed and dated (19)88, bears label verso for 'Page's Fine Art Galleries', approx 25x32cm, framed
Harding Frankview full entry
Reference: see BEARNES HAMPTON & LITTLEWOOD UK auction.
, 11 July 2017, lot 593: Frank Harding [b.1935, Australian]:- The Campers:- signed and inscribed, signed and inscribed Renmark, South Australia on reverse oil on board 44.5 x 59.5cm. (Similar to the work of Prop Hart).
Deklaus Osklaus view full entry
Reference: see Crows Auction Gallery Antiques & Collectables Lot 610C, 5 July, 2017, lot 610C: Osklaus Deklaus, 'Sandy Point' N.S.W., oil on canvas
Tanner Edwinview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Storrier Timview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Shead Garryview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Boucher Davidview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Boucher & Coview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Maguire Timview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Yeldham Joshuaview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Murray-White Cliveview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Elenberg Joelview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Boyd Davidview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Coburn Johnview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Cook William Delafieldview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Audette Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Abel Catherineview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Westwood Bryanview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Westwood Bryanview full entry
Reference: see Wingadal : the John Symond collection by Elizabeth Hastings (Curator of the collection). Includes an essay on each work often containing biographical information.

‘The private collection of Sydney businessman John Symond, including masterpieces of Australian art [by about 30 Australian Modern and Contemporary artists] and a world class collection of art deco furniture and objects. Published for private distribution by Mr. Symond and not intended for sale.’
Publishing details: Sydney : The Beagle Press, 2013. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 300, illustrated.
Redpath R Gview full entry
Reference: Melbourne in pen and ink, with 21 full page reproductions of Redpath’s pen drawings of Melbourne.
Publishing details: Melbourne : printed by Norman Bros., c. 1933. Octavo, printed wrappers, pp. 24,


Ref: 1000
Dyson Willview full entry
Reference: Lady Adela, by Gerald Gould ; Drawings by Will Dyson
Publishing details: Cecil Palmer, London, 1920
Ref: 1000
Lang Ludwigview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House, ‘Bendigo to Bismarck’ catalogue, July 2017: ‘[BISMARCK] LANG, Ludwig.
Illuminated presentation address from the German citizens of
Sandhurst (present-day Bendigo) to Prince Otto von Bismarck.
Large folio-sized presentation volume framing a hand-painted manuscript address, 514 x 397 mm, in watercolour, ink and gouache, with highly coloured design incorporating ten vignettes (six of them illustrative scenes of Sandhurst life, a larger scenic depiction of a Bendigo mine, an emblematic gure, and two coats-of-arms); in a superb binding by W. Detmold of Melbourne: dark blue-black grained morocco, complex multiple gilt borders to both sides with an inscription in gilt on the front cover, internal gilt borders framing on one side a doublure of beige moirésilk and on the other side the illuminated address itself. Melbourne, Entw. u. ausgeführt v. Ludwig Lang [Designed and executed by Ludwig Lang], 18 April 1873... e artist Ludwig Lang
Ludwig Lang (1834-1919) studied lithography in Hamburg and established his own business there, before emigrating to Melbourne in 1860 where he worked for several di erent companies as a lithographic artist, between periods when he ran his own studio and taught painting and drawing. e present memorial dates from a period during which he established his ‘Academy of Drawing and Music’ in Richmond in about 1870, subsequently at Prahran until 1877.
Later he worked for Sands & McDougall, ran another studio of his own, and nished by working for the Government Printing O ce, again as a litho- graphic artist. He served as foundation president of the Victorian Lithographic Artists and Engravers Club from 1889 to at least 1891. He would have been a natural choice for the Deutscher Verein to commission for this piece, since in 1868 he was one
of the founder members of a sister institution, the Melbourne Deutsche Liedertafel, in which he was actively involved.
His work, often unsigned, is not well known, apart from a num- ber of lithographic printings dating from this period such as the sheet music for Victoria March (1872; decorated title-page), Illus- trated Australian Family Almanac for the 1873 (illustrated cover) and 1874 (four lithographic portraits) issues. More of his printed work is known from the 1880s.
Illuminated addresses
Lang combined with his fellow German immigrant the master- binder William Detmold to create a number of illuminated ad- dresses, for which there was a considerable fashion in the second half of the nineteenth century, most particularly in the 1880s and 1890s. e present, earlier, example is one of their rst as well as nest such creations. Wendy Pryor has written about a similar, considerably later, piece acquired by the State Library of Victoria in 1984: “a large, framed illuminated address painted by Lud- wig Lang and presented in 1891 to Francis Walter Binns, rst Mayor of Oakleigh. is important purchase added to an already impressive collection of similar items including two signi cant groups presented to two early Governors of Victoria, Sir Henry Brougham Loch and the Earl of Hopetoun...”.
Four other illuminated addresses created by Lang in the late 1880s are also held by the State Library of Victoria, and Wendy Pryor speculates that ‘it is possible that Lang was responsible for some other addresses produced by Sands and McDougall, where he was employed between 1877 and 1885... Although they con- stitute but a small body of work, these ve signed watercolours by Lang nevertheless add to our knowledge of his oeuvre.’ is earlier and previously unrecorded piece now adds further to his known work.’ Extended information in catalogue.
Manning Tempeview full entry
Reference: Tempe Manning: retrospective.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Collins Street Gallery, [n.d.] 10 p. ; 21 cm.


Ref: 1009
Manning Tempeview full entry
Reference: Thesis: The first Australian modernists : Tempe Manning, Norah Simpson and Grace Cossington Smith : gender, myth and art criticism during the First World War / Lesley Harding.
Publishing details: thesis (masters)
2 v., bound : ill. (some col.) ; 30 cm.
Published 1997.

Ref: 1009
Wallace Georgeview full entry
Reference: George Wallace the comedian painted water colours. See 45 The Autobiography of Kerwin Maegraith by Kerwin Maegraith, David Maegraith (Editor) [’ Meet the man who knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
For the first time, his unique moments with those legends mentioned above, plus H. G. Wells, Bradman, Melba and many others, are brought together.
This is a collection of an artist's recollections. It is, in black and white, the art and times of Kerwin Maegraith.’] [’Meet the Author
Kerwin Maegraith was a famous Australian black and white artist.
He knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
Maegraith was a former member of the staff of Sunday Times, Sydney, Sydney Daily Mirror, and Adelaide Advertiser; caricatures in Sydney Bulletin, Sporting and Dramatic, The Bystander, The Sketch, Daily Herald (London), Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph.
Toured England with [Australian Cricket] Test Team in 1934; War Artist attached to 1st Aircraft Carrier Squadron, British Pacific Fleet. First artist to picturegram [fax] sporting cartoons from Cricket Test Matches in Australia to London Daily Mail; creator of radio-cartoons Who's Zoo series; wrote book and lyrics of musical play It Ain't Cricket. Publications: Celebrities in Caricature, Who's Who in Adelaide, Our Arborosities, Wigs and Wags.’]
Publishing details: CreateSpace Publishing, 2011, 32pp
Illingworth Nelsonview full entry
Reference: Reference to Illingwoth designing lamposts in Martin Place p67 in The Autobiography of Kerwin Maegraith by Kerwin Maegraith, David Maegraith (Editor) [’ Meet the man who knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
For the first time, his unique moments with those legends mentioned above, plus H. G. Wells, Bradman, Melba and many others, are brought together.
This is a collection of an artist's recollections. It is, in black and white, the art and times of Kerwin Maegraith.’] [’Meet the Author
Kerwin Maegraith was a famous Australian black and white artist.
He knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
Maegraith was a former member of the staff of Sunday Times, Sydney, Sydney Daily Mirror, and Adelaide Advertiser; caricatures in Sydney Bulletin, Sporting and Dramatic, The Bystander, The Sketch, Daily Herald (London), Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph.
Toured England with [Australian Cricket] Test Team in 1934; War Artist attached to 1st Aircraft Carrier Squadron, British Pacific Fleet. First artist to picturegram [fax] sporting cartoons from Cricket Test Matches in Australia to London Daily Mail; creator of radio-cartoons Who's Zoo series; wrote book and lyrics of musical play It Ain't Cricket. Publications: Celebrities in Caricature, Who's Who in Adelaide, Our Arborosities, Wigs and Wags.’]
Publishing details: CreateSpace Publishing, 2011, 32pp
Sullivan Patview full entry
Reference: Reference to Sullivan p67 in The Autobiography of Kerwin Maegraith by Kerwin Maegraith, David Maegraith (Editor) [’ Meet the man who knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
For the first time, his unique moments with those legends mentioned above, plus H. G. Wells, Bradman, Melba and many others, are brought together.
This is a collection of an artist's recollections. It is, in black and white, the art and times of Kerwin Maegraith.’] [’Meet the Author
Kerwin Maegraith was a famous Australian black and white artist.
He knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
Maegraith was a former member of the staff of Sunday Times, Sydney, Sydney Daily Mirror, and Adelaide Advertiser; caricatures in Sydney Bulletin, Sporting and Dramatic, The Bystander, The Sketch, Daily Herald (London), Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph.
Toured England with [Australian Cricket] Test Team in 1934; War Artist attached to 1st Aircraft Carrier Squadron, British Pacific Fleet. First artist to picturegram [fax] sporting cartoons from Cricket Test Matches in Australia to London Daily Mail; creator of radio-cartoons Who's Zoo series; wrote book and lyrics of musical play It Ain't Cricket. Publications: Celebrities in Caricature, Who's Who in Adelaide, Our Arborosities, Wigs and Wags.’]
Publishing details: CreateSpace Publishing, 2011, 32pp
Sullivan Patview full entry
Reference: Reference to Sullivan p67 in The Autobiography of Kerwin Maegraith by Kerwin Maegraith, David Maegraith (Editor) [’ Meet the man who knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
For the first time, his unique moments with those legends mentioned above, plus H. G. Wells, Bradman, Melba and many others, are brought together.
This is a collection of an artist's recollections. It is, in black and white, the art and times of Kerwin Maegraith.’] [’Meet the Author
Kerwin Maegraith was a famous Australian black and white artist.
He knew and drew Picasso in Paris, Einstein and Lawrence of Arabia in London, Hemingway in Hawaii and lived with Errol Flynn in Sydney. Kerwin Maegraith, caricaturist, journalist and true Aussie larrikin, encountered the most famous people of his time from the twenties to the sixties.
Maegraith was a former member of the staff of Sunday Times, Sydney, Sydney Daily Mirror, and Adelaide Advertiser; caricatures in Sydney Bulletin, Sporting and Dramatic, The Bystander, The Sketch, Daily Herald (London), Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph.
Toured England with [Australian Cricket] Test Team in 1934; War Artist attached to 1st Aircraft Carrier Squadron, British Pacific Fleet. First artist to picturegram [fax] sporting cartoons from Cricket Test Matches in Australia to London Daily Mail; creator of radio-cartoons Who's Zoo series; wrote book and lyrics of musical play It Ain't Cricket. Publications: Celebrities in Caricature, Who's Who in Adelaide, Our Arborosities, Wigs and Wags.’]
Publishing details: CreateSpace Publishing, 2011, 32pp
Smith Heideview full entry
Reference: Heide Smith, Photographer - Josef Lebovic catalogue, Collectors’ List no 188, 2017.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic catalogue, Collectors’ lLst no 188, 2017
Ref: 57
Crocker Maryview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
11.| After John Latham (Brit., 1740-1837). |[Bird Studies],| 1829.|Pair of watercolours with ink and gouache, captioned and dated “Oct 21st, 1829” or “Nov’r 14th, 1829” in ink throughout, 32 x 23.3cm, 27.5 x 18.6cm. Minor foxing and stains. Framed.| The pair ...
Captions read “Peruvian Flycatcher, inhabits Paraguay; Crimson Bellied Flycatcher, inhabits N.S. Wales; Duree Finch, inhabits Bengal” and “Banksain [sic] Cockatoo, inhabits New Holland; Horned Parrot, inhabits New Caledonia & called there Kere or Keghe, only two have reached England, one by Sir J. [Joseph] Banks the other by Gen. Davies.” Prov- enance: Bridget McDonnell Gallery, Melbourne.
These watercolours were painted by Mary Crocker (active 1825-1835), who based the bird images on illustrations in books by prominent English ornithologist John Latham, the “grandfather of Australi- an ornithology.” His published works include A General Synopsis of Birds, 1781-1785 and A General History of Birds, 1821-1828. Ref: Wiki.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Latham Johnview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
11.| After John Latham (Brit., 1740-1837). |[Bird Studies],| 1829.|Pair of watercolours with ink and gouache, captioned and dated “Oct 21st, 1829” or “Nov’r 14th, 1829” in ink throughout, 32 x 23.3cm, 27.5 x 18.6cm. Minor foxing and stains. Framed.| The pair ...
Captions read “Peruvian Flycatcher, inhabits Paraguay; Crimson Bellied Flycatcher, inhabits N.S. Wales; Duree Finch, inhabits Bengal” and “Banksain [sic] Cockatoo, inhabits New Holland; Horned Parrot, inhabits New Caledonia & called there Kere or Keghe, only two have reached England, one by Sir J. [Joseph] Banks the other by Gen. Davies.” Prov- enance: Bridget McDonnell Gallery, Melbourne.
These watercolours were painted by Mary Crocker (active 1825-1835), who based the bird images on illustrations in books by prominent English ornithologist John Latham, the “grandfather of Australi- an ornithology.” His published works include A General Synopsis of Birds, 1781-1785 and A General History of Birds, 1821-1828. Ref: Wiki.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Wilson Williamview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
15.| William Wilson (Brit./Aust., c1792-1867).| Regentville, The Seat Of Sir John Jamison,|1839.|Engrav- ing, artist and title in plate below image, 11.7 x 20.1cm. Trimmed to platemark, minor creases and stains to margins.|
... Published by James Maclehose in Picture of Sydney and Strangers’ Guide in New South
Wales for 1839. Held in NGA.
Regentville is a suburb of Sydney, close to Penrith. The property “Regentville” was built by Jamison around 1825 and is described as “a famous country house of the early period, named in honour of George IV, the former Prince Regent. “Regentville” was a model property with vineyards, an irrigation scheme, and a woollen mill built about 1842; it was here that Henry Parkes obtained his first employment
in Australia.” Ref: ADB.

Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Cotton Johnview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
18.| |Duplicate Of John Cotton’s Letters From Australia Felix [“Fortunate Australia”] Of Doogallook Station, Goul­ bourn [Sic] River, Victoria,| c1843-1894.| Fifty-six (56) letters transcribed in ink with various illustrations in pencil, in quarter leather and cloth bound hardcover book, initialled “F.C.S.” [Frank C. Snodgrass] on book cover, titled, signed by Sno- dgrass “copyist” and dated “Nov. 1894” in ‘finale’ [p237], 34 x 22cm, 328pp (book); 42pp (addendum). Leather rot, stains to boards, binding loose but intact.|
... Title continues “Born 1802, died 1849. [Copied] by F.C. Snodgrass. Letters extend from May 1843 to July 1849 – these being true copies from the original letters themselves now in possession of Lady Clarke.” A comprehensive family tree, showing Cotton’s relatives, including the botanical painter Ellis Rowan and the early colonist Charles Ryan,
follows the letters.
Provenance: Casey Family.
|
Captions mention the suburbs of Longueville and Northwood.
|
$1,250
John Cotton (1802-1849) was a Victorian pioneer, pastoralist and naturalist who arrived in Australia from London in 1843. He took up a station on the Goulburn River, Doogallook, and soon acquired “more than sixty sq. miles (155 km2) and expected to shear 10,000 sheep.” This volume presents a series of letters to his brother William in Ivybridge, Devon, England, in which Cotton describes his arrival in the Port Philip district, Victoria, the fauna and flora, Melbourne social life, the
customs of the local Aborigines, and his business affairs, thus providing an invaluable record of colonial life in Victoria before the gold rushes. There are many illustrations throughout, often drawn over the text, including two native birds – “Australian mourning bird” and a “large species of crane.”
Also included is a handwritten manuscript entitled Pioneering In The Forties, by Frank Campbell Snodgrass (the copyist of the letters and grandson of John Cotton), which appears to have been published as a series in The Leader (Melbourne), circa 1905. Ref: ADB.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Thorne Rosalie Ann 1850-1927view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
38.| Rosalie Ann Thorne (Aust., 1850-1927).| “Ellerslie”, Waverley [NSW], |c1870-1871.| Two pencil drawings, each initialled “R.A.T.”, titled “Elerslie [sic]” and dated lower left or right, 9.3 x 17.5cm and 15.8 x 23.8cm. Minor foxing.... Rosalie Ann Thorne was reputedly a pupil of Conrad Mar- tens. She was a friend of his daughter, Rebecca Martens (Aust.,1836-1909), who was also her mentor. The two
friends often went sketching together. Ref: DAAO.
The two-storey house "Ellerslie", in the Sydney suburb of Waverley, was built about 1860 by John Birrell. A photograph, held in Sydney Living Museums, taken in January of 1871 shows the Thorne family members in front of the house, which was leased to them for about one year. The house, later renamed “Almount”, was eventually sold to the Franciscan Fathers in 1902 who established Waverley
College, with the house becoming the Brothers’ residence. Ref: Sydney Living Museums.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Warren Selbyview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
157.| Selby Warren (Aust., 1887-1979).| [Trunkey Creek Farm Scene],| c1960s.|
Crayon, felt tip and pen on board, 41 x 51.3cm. Framed. ... “Selby Warren was a bushman and rabbit-trapper who spent his entire life in the village of Trunkey Creek in the central west of NSW. He started painting in his late seventies using brushes made with his own hair. Before picking up these brushes he was known among his fellow workers as a keen storyteller with a particular passion for the poems and ballads describing the lives of local stockmen and bushrangers. He would illustrate his stories and poems, using a stick in the dirt or charcoal on the back of a shovel, during tea breaks. While the work of Selby Warren is little known today he en- joyed a level of success in the 1970s during which time he exhibited at the Rudy Komon Gallery.” Ref:
Patrick Hartigan, art critic and artist, 2015.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Toovey Doraview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
160.| Dora Toovey (Aust., 1898-1986).| Miss North- ern Territory,| c1960s.| Oil on canvas, signed on image lower right, titled, artist’s name with address and anno- tated “xm3513” in ink verso, 26.6 x 21.7cm. Minor paint loss to upper and lower edges. Framed.| Address reads “23 Parriwi Road, Mosman, NSW.” Dora Toovey's work is held in AGNSW, and the NPG with the comment “Dora Toovey, born in Bathurst, trained in Sydney under Antonio Dattilo-Rubbo, James R. Jackson (whom she married) and John Pass- more. She painted portraits from 1924; during three years’ travel studies from 1926 she attended the Académie Julian in Paris, and spent some time under Augustus John in the south of France. A long-term resident of Mosman, Toovey frequently exhibited landscapes in the Wynne Prize, and she was an Archi- bald finalist thirty-four (34) times though she never won the Prize. She won the Portia Geach Memorial Award in 1970 with a self-portrait in a landscape, and 1978 with a portrait of Neville Bonner.”
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Fazzari Roccoview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Collector’s list 187, 2017:
169.| Rocco Fazzari (Aust., b.1959).| [Alan Bond],| 1987.| Pen and ink with white highlight, publishing annotation, signed and dated in pencil and ink above and belowimage,37x35.4cm.|
|
Annotation includes “Page 59, Dec. (87) Bulletin, 50%.”
Adelaide-born artist Rocco Fazzari’s illustra- tive work has been published in the Fairfax press for the past twenty years, as well as in numerous major publications including Roll- ing Stone magazine and American Sports Illustrated.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Gallery, 2017, 32pp
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017view full entry
Reference: Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Ref: 63
von Guerard Eugene view full entry
Reference: Evening after a storm, near the Island of St Pauls, 1854, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Loureiro Artur 1853-1939view full entry
Reference: An Australian Scene, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Cant Jamesview full entry
Reference: Dead Girl and The Dispute, 2 works and essay, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: Rain at Cattle Creek, essay, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Pease Christopherview full entry
Reference: Freeway, 2003, essay, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Churcher Peterview full entry
Reference: Drinking Age Verified, 2004, essay, see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art Collectors’ Exhibition 2017. 43 works listed in catalogue with essays and extensive information including biographical information.
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins, 2017, pb, 52pp
Day Fine Artview full entry
Reference: Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essays on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Ref: 132
Janssen Jacob view full entry
Reference: Sydney Harbour from Above Rose Bay, 1850, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Landscape, still-life and portrait painter, was born at 7 p.m. on 9 December 1779 at Einlage, Prussia, second of the 11 children of Abraham Janssen (1740-1808) and his second wife Catherine, née Ham (1756-1813). In 1807 he started on a trip to the United States, passing through Copenhagen, Lisbon and Boston before settling in Philadelphia. Janssen’s diary (ML), written in his native German, begins with this voyage. In it he recorded his travels, adventures, observations and friendships for the next 33 years, occasionally lapsing into English. It is possible that Janssen went to the United States to escape religious persecution as he initially worked as a farm labourer for a Mennonite preacher in Montgomery, Pennsylvania. After moving to Philadelphia he began to go to twice weekly drawing classes (at $13 a quarter) given by Signor Piesio Ancora ‘who comes from Rome’ (but who actually was a member of the School of Naples) and with whom he later lodged. Working occasionally as a sign-painter and glazier, Janssen was commissioned in June 1811 by the Quaker R. Smith to draw up two large plans for Smith’s proposed New Rome settlement 94 miles from Philadelphia. In 1814 he became one of the ‘volunteer Greys’, a troop formed after the English burned the city of Washington.
On 5 October 1815 Janssen boarded the George Washington to return to Germany. By July 1818 he was again in Hamburg. After visiting friends in Lébeck and Danzig, he left in October for a brief sojourn in Philadelphia. In November 1819 he sailed to Rio de Janeiro, where he stayed for the next twelve years. A romantic involvement in Brazil may partly explain his long stay there; a later reference in his diary to ‘love stealing his heart with a pair of black eyes’ suggests that this amorous interlude occurred in 1821. It also seems that he was in some way attached to the royal court of Dom Pedro, as his diary is filled with the gossip of the court and his residence in Brazil terminated only months before the enforced abdication of the Infante. The Mitchell Library has several sketches from his Brazilian period, notably Mr Georg [sic] Nailors House Botologo near Rio de Janeiro (1829) and The House of Mr Muttre (1827). At the end of his stay, wherever he travelled, Janssen recorded the names of friends and acquaintances in each place and various public events in which he was interested. The sole personal note from this period was to record the purchase of a painting by Guido (Reni) for $5. In October 1831 Janssen returned once more to the Eastern seaboard of the United States, staying at both Philadelphia and Baltimore and again visiting Signor Ancora. An undated panorama (ML) could be of either city. Soon afterwards he set off for India. After travelling for a short time he settled in Calcutta; a watercolour panorama and the ink and watercolour A Pepul Tree on Garden Rear of Road 1836 are in the Mitchell Library. It was in India that he sold his Guido for $350, possibly in order to settle his dispute with a shipping agent over his passage money of $400.
Janssen appears initially to have enjoyed British colonial life. He records his first earnings from a Mr Adams ‘for teaching his little daughter to draw’, and a commission (undescribed) from Sir Charles Grey, a judge of the Colonial Court with whom he soon became disenchanted due to Grey’s meanness over payment. Here Janssen attempted to improve his English by copying long extracts from the Calcutta newspapers, mainly about murder trials and bankruptcies, but his personal diary notes continue to be in German. From Calcutta he travelled to Singapore ( Singapore from on board the Sunken Ship Pacco 1837, ML) and Manila (sketchbook of Indian and Filipino costumes, ML).
In Manila the diary notes, briefly in English, give details of a commission and illustrate the difficulties of trying to earn a living as a painter at this time. Janssen wrote: ‘October 24th 1839 Padre Learma of the Binondo church ordered a painting 6 feet by 4.5 [182 × 134 cm] the subject was Voltaire and his disciples befor [sic] his judges vir [viz]: Christ—the Pope and the King of Spain containing above 40 figures: the Padre advanced me at different times up to [$]122 but before I could finish it Padre Learma fell into disgrace with the Archbishop and was sent into the convent of St Thomas: Wore [sic] I went to see him the 19th of June 1840 he told me that at present he had no command of any money that he would leave me the above advance and that perhaps the present padre of Binondo or the Archbishop would buy the picture but as these gentleman [sic] would not come to any terms I raffled the picture on the 24th of August 1840 the raffel [sic] consisted [of] 53 tickets at $10 each, was won by Sn—Maracaida’. Janssen then noted, ‘Recived [sic] of Don Matheas Vesmannes on account of the former Governor $100 of which I brought to Sydney 24 Dobloons’ but this may refer to another commission.
On 5 September 1840 he left Manila for Sydney in the Louisa Campbell , arriving on 5 December 1840. His diary indicates that he moved house frequently in the first three years; during 1842 43 he boarded for several months with Frederick Garlingand his family in Market Lane. In 1841 the Sydney Gazette commended ‘several beautiful specimens of landscape painting in watercolours’ by Janssen and remarked that he also excelled in portrait painting and miniatures on ivory (no surviving examples of his portraiture have been identified). His earliest dated Australian work is a view of Sydney Cove painted in 1842 (TMAG). An oil on canvas, this is distinguished by its pale blue and grey palette and a tonality which recreates Sydney as a Baltic seaport. It depicts a part of Sydney near Campbell’s wharves and shows the commercial rather than the leisurely face of the town, unlike its pendant, Sydney Harbour from Mrs Macquarie’s Chair (c.1842, AGSA).
Other Sydney views from the 1840s are Lyons Terrace 1844 (p.c.), Hunter Street Sydney 1845 (p.c.) and Oxford Street Sydney 1847 (ML), all watercolours with pen-and-ink. These show an exactness of detail and accuracy of perspective suggestive of a training in architectural draughtsmanship. Frequently they are coloured with the touches of indigo blue that Janssen used to highlight certain features.
As well as landscape and portraiture, Janssen painted contemporary events. Dr Lang Addressing the Legislative Council of New South Wales in 1844 (NLA) shows the controversial John Dunmore Lang making his speech on the separation of Port Phillip from New South Wales. In 1846 Janssen was involved in a scandal surrounding another painting of this type, The Opening of the Debate in the City Council on the Financial Estimate for 1846 . The Sydney Morning Heraldsarcastically applauded the artist (who is referred to as Jacob Tonson), ‘for a picture more expressive of all that is stupid and phlegmatic never came from the easel of a Dutch [sic] painter’. An uproar ensued and one councillor, Thomas Hyndes, physically attacked the reporter on the council steps. The Sydney Morning Heraldpublished an ‘apology’ a fortnight later which was almost as libellous as the original article, stating that Janssen had not wished to make the council appear ridiculous but had unfortunately done so, through incompetence it is implied. The picture was raffled among the 30 members of the council ‘with three dice, three throws each’ at a guinea per person. Its present location is not known.
In the late 1840s, perhaps in an effort to find a wider market, Janssen tried his hand at almost every possible kind of painting, executing and sometimes exhibiting still-life, marine, religious, genre and landscape works. Critical reaction, as a rule, was poor. About this time he completed a two-panel panorama of showing Sydney Harbour from Vaucluse (o/c, ML), a subject which he also painted on a single canvas. These and a View of Sydney Harbour from above Rose Bay 1850 , which incorporates and identifies his fellow-artist Conrad Martens sitting on a rock sketching the view, seem to have been private commissions, none being publicly exhibited or commented on in the press. A.B. Spark exhibited Janssen’s Election of the Village Magistrate at the 1849 Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia Exhibition and he records visiting Janssen’s studio to inspect two paintings on 25 June 1850.
Towards the late 1840s Janssen may once again have attracted the patronage of the Church (this time the Anglican), since from 1848 to 1855 he painted a number of watercolour views of modest suburban churches: St Thomas’s at Enfield in 1848 (ML), St John’s at Ashfield in 1852 (p.c.) and St Mark’s at Darling Point in 1855 (p.c.). All are carefully detailed, strongly-coloured watercolours with a gentle, naive quality.
In 1849, at the age of 70, Janssen fell in love with a much younger woman whom he refers to in his diary as ‘Mrs L’. His friends did not approve of this attachment and quarrelled with him. Two letters in his diary to the solicitor Edwin Daintry (‘E.D.’) give details of the sad affair which, he wrote, destroyed his dreams so that he ‘wished to die but even that was denyd [sic]’. It was not until 30 July 1856, at the age of 77, that Jacob Janssen, ‘Portrait Painter’, died in his Sydney residence, 17 Domain Terrace, from ‘paralysis’. Rev. Charles Kemp conducted his funeral service in Camperdown Cemetery. After one brief period of notoriety, he seems to have been forgotten. No newspaper published an obituary.
Written by Candice Bruce.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Garling Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information. ‘Born: 1806
Died: 1873
Frederick Garling, customs official and marine artist, was born on 23 February 1806 at King Street, Holborn, London, the son of Frederick Garling senior. He arrived in Australia with his parents in the Francis and Eliza in 1815. In 1827 he was appointed a landing waiter in the Customs Office in Sydney at £250 a year and in 1847 was promoted acting landing surveyor. In 1856 before a parliamentary select committee, and in 1859 before a board of inquiry, he gave detailed evidence on the state and working of the Customs Department.
He was entirely self-taught as an artist and specialized, naturally enough, in marine subjects. His output was prodigious: it is said that he painted a large proportion of the ships which entered Port Jackson during his lifetime. Most of his work, which was generally unsigned, was in water-colour and characterized by a feeling for atmosphere absent from the work of earlier Australian topographical artists. Examples of his art are to be seen in the Dixson and Mitchell Galleries, Sydney, and in the home of the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron. He also wrote some verse of an undistinguished quality. He died in Sydney on 16 November 1873.
In 1829 at St Philip’s, Sydney, he married Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Lieutenant Ward of the 1st Regiment, and niece of General Hawkshaw of the East India Co.’s service. They had seven sons and four daughters. The eldest son, Frederick Augustus (1833-1910), was an explorer and pioneer in north Queensland.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Wingate William Thomas 1807-1869view full entry
Reference: possible self portrait, Sydney, 1853, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Shaw James Baird 1812-1883view full entry
Reference: two portraits, c1862, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Rodius Charles attributedview full entry
Reference: Portrait of a Child, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Born: 1802
Died: 1860
Charles Rodius, artist, was born in Cologne, Germany. Inscriptions in French on some of his drawings suggest that his background was French rather than German. He went to England and acquired an easy command of the English language. In 1829 he was convicted at Westminster on a charge of stealing a reticule and sentenced to transportation for seven years. He arrived in New South Wales in December 1829 in the Sarah.
On arrival Rodius was assigned to the Department of Public Works, where he was employed without salary in instructing civil and military officers in drawing. As a draughtsman he was also engaged by the colonial architect to produce plans of ‘every building throughout the Colony’ and to formulate plans of projected buildings. His service was considered invaluable, and his seniors were reluctant to uphold Rodius’s application for a ticket-of-leave which would exempt him from compulsory government service.
In addition to regular attendance at the department Rodius, as soon as he arrived in the colony, was engaged to teach drawing and perspective to the children of reputable gentlemen in Sydney. These included children of Chief Justice (Sir) Francis Forbes, of whom there is a small crayon-and-wash portrait by Rodius in the Dixson Collection, Sydney; W. Foster, chairman of the Courts of Quarter Sessions, and John Manning. All three testified on the artist’s behalf to his good conduct and regular attendance when, in November 1831, he applied to Governor (Sir) Ralph Darling for a ticket-of-leave. A ticket-of-exemption, with the requirement that he remain in the district of Sydney, was granted to Rodius in July 1832, a ticket-of-leave in February 1834, and a certificate of freedom in July 1841.
Rodius’s ticket-of-exemption records his calling, before conviction, as ‘artist and architect’, and he is believed to have made engravings of buildings in Paris for the French government. In a notice published in 1839 advertising that he was giving lessons in drawing and perspective, Rodius described himself as a ‘Pupil of the Royal Academy of France’.
In 1831 the first of his lithographed portraits of Aboriginal ‘Kings’ and their wives was published, and the series was completed in 1834. In addition he executed portraits in ‘French crayon’ and oils, and the first of his landscape paintings to be engraved, a coloured view of Port Jackson taken from Bunker’s Hill, was sold in 1834. Other lithographed works included a view of the Lansdowne Bridge, 1836, a second series of Aboriginals’ portraits, 1840, and illustrations of the Kennedy expedition of 1849. Rodius contributed a small number of works to the exhibitions of the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia in 1847, 1849 and 1857. To the last he sent a portrait of Ludwig Leichhardt.
From his professional activities as art teacher, portraitist and landscape painter, Rodius must have made a fair living, for in 1835 he paid £45 for a block of land in Campbell Street, Sydney, and was able to support a wife and child. The parish of St James records the birth of a son, Charles Prossper, to Charles Rodius, artist, and Maria Bryan, seamstress, on 27 August 1834. This wife presumably died, for he remarried. The death of his second wife, Harriet, took place on 14 December 1838. The notice of Harriet’s death gave her age as ‘in her 17th year’, but the tombstone which Rodius engraved for her, ‘sculptured by her afflicted husband as a last tribute his affection can give’ (removed from the Devonshire Street cemetery to La Perouse) gives her age as 18. In July 1841, soon after receiving his certificate of freedom, Rodius sailed for Port Phillip, but the length and purpose of his stay is not known.
During the late 1850s Rodius suffered a stroke which paralysed one side, and on 9 April 1860 he died ‘of infirmity’ at the Liverpool Hospital. The record of his death indicates that he was a Roman Catholic, and that at the time of his death nothing was known to the hospital authorities of his family in Australia or of his parents.
Rodius signed his name ‘Rodius’ and it was spelt thus on his certificates of exemption, leave, and freedom. The spelling ‘Rhodius’ was used in newspaper notices of his work, and in communications concerning the artist’s activities in the Department of Public Works.
Biography written by Jocelyn Gray. Published in the Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 2 (MUP) 1967.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Terry Frederic Charles view full entry
Reference: Sydney Harbour, c1855, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Birth/Family
Frederick Casemero Terry (1825-1869), artist and engraver, (watercolourist, illustrator, etcher and drawing teacher) was born in Great Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England.
He is the third son (fifth child) of Henry Terry, language teacher, of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, and his wife Isabella, née Clark.
Education/ Early Work
Educated in Switzerland, he arrived in Sydney in the early 1850s.
His earliest known extant work, is a watercolour view of ‘Point Piper, Sydney’ dated 10 April 1852, by which time he seems to have been resident in Sydney. He was certainly living there by August 1853, when he exhibited View of Sydney Harbour, Taken from Ball’s Head at the Victorian Fine Arts Society’s exhibition in Melbourne.
Other early works include ‘Sydney from the Old Point Piper Road’ (1852), ‘Sydney Cove from Fort Macquarie’ (1853).
Soon accepted as a thoroughly professional water-colour artist, he did some of his own engraving.
Exhibitions/Prizes/Work
 In 1854 the Sydney publisher John Sands commissioned a series of sketches from Terry, principally views of Sydney and the harbour. Thirty-eight were engraved on steel in London and issued at Sydney in 1855 as Landscape Scenery, Illustrating Sydney, Paramatta, Richmond, Maitland, Windsor and Port Jackson, New South Wales (also known as The Australian Keepsake).
 In 1854 he submitted a design for a medal to the New South Wales commissioners for the 1855 Paris Universal Exhibition. He won second prize of five guineas and a five-guinea bonus for the exquisite finish of his design. One of the medals as produced, with Terry’s design on the verso, is in the Mitchell Library.
In 1855 he was represented at the Paris exhibition with five other Australian artists. It was the first time that Australian paintings had hung in an important overseas display.
His watercolour View of Botany Bay was presented to the French government by the New South Wales government, after being exhibited in Sydney and Paris, and now hangs in the Marine Museum, Paris.
(The watercolour, now titled Tombeau du Père Receveur Botany Bay, is held at the Musée de la Marine, Paris; the tree-stump, returned to New South Wales in 1988 as a French bicentennial gift, is at the La Perouse Museum, Sydney.)
Some of Terry’s engravings were published by Sands and Kenny as the Australian Keepsake (1855). The volume contained scenes of ‘Port Jackson’, ‘Pinch Gut’, ‘The Gap, South Head’, Sydney’s streets, fruit markets and churches as well as country views of Richmond, Windsor and East and West Maitland.
In January 1857 Terry exhibited Pic-nic Party, Middle Harbour in the Further Exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia, which was held in the Mechanics’ School of Arts, Sydney.
By 1860 he was recognized as one of the best colonial painters. About that year another small volume appeared as The Parramatta River Illustrated with six prints. By 1861 he had become examiner of a drawing class established at the Mechanics’ School of Arts in 1859.
Terry sought other ways of making money, including designing the covers for popular sheet-music. He executed the covers for The Maude Waltzes, ‘as played by the Band of the 77th Regiment’ and The Darling Point Polka. He later collaborated with Edmund Thomas to illustrate pieces in The Australian Musical Album for 1863.
In 1863, Terry moved his studio and residence to Alma Street, Newtown, and advertised that he would also conduct both day and evening drawing classes at the School of Arts, Balmain.
In August 1864, he issued a series of eight copperplate etchings illustrating various views of Sydney Harbour, described as having the appearance of pen-and-ink work.
The Bush Track was exhibited at the Paris Universal Exhibition in 1867, the year Terry was appointed drawing master at the Sydney Mechanics School of Arts. The following March the committee decided that Terry had resigned ‘in consequence of his non-attendance’ and took steps to find another teacher. By then he must have been ill as well as impoverished.
Name
Terry’s middle name is difficult to settle. An engraver’s error had resulted in Terry’s name being incorrectly recorded throughout as ‘Fleury’. The C in his name is referred to sometimes as Clark, from his mother’s family, and Charles was also used, but Terry seems to have preferred the exotic Casemero or Cassinis.
Paintings
Terry painted local watercolour views, such as King Street, Sydney Looking West, 1853 , and made occasional sketching tours to Newcastle.
His paintings were almost entirely views of Sydney and its environs and were painstaking in detail. Almost every work included people, animals, birds and some form of activity. Historically pictorial, they give an excellent record of life in the city.
Newspapers
Terry did a considerable amount of work for illustrated newspapers, journals and books during the 1850s, especially the Illustrated Sydney News. His view of the 1854 Australian Museum Exhibition showing in great detail the interior of the Museum Exhibition Hall with the exhibits in place was drawn after a daguerreotype by James Gow, lithographed by John Degotardi and published as a separate print. He was also a paid contributor to Melbourne Punch. In 1863 the Sydney Morning Herald reviewed a large watercolour by Terry of a picnic at Captain Cook’s landing place. A lengthy review in the Sydney Morning Herald in 1866 stated that Terry’s watercolour of Port Jackson in an approaching storm reflected credit on all colonial art and artists.
Death
Aged 44, Terry died on 10 August 1869 of effusion of the brain at his residence in Alma Street, Newtown. He was buried in the Camperdown cemetery. Despite Terry having dominated the exhibition scene throughout the 1850s and 1860s, he had found it hard to make a living. He had married Margaret Jane Reynolds (d.1862) on 14 July 1858.
His wife died of Consumption. (8th April 1862- Sydney Morning Herald PAGE 7 19TH April 1862)
Representation of the artist
His work is represented in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Mitchell and Dixson libraries, Sydney, and the National Library of Australia, Canberra.
 ’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Steffani Arturoview full entry
Reference: Coast of NSW, 1888, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Born Arthur Stevens c1852 in the UK (Hinckley) – “an aristocratic Englishman” – Italinised his name for professional reasons (see article in Freeman’s Journal 3 September 1898)
He changed his name for the purpose of tutoring, his professional name became Signor Steffani)
Studied art as a student in South Kensington but also took up singing. Studied in Milan and sang in London – “Mr Gye Covent Garden Opera Company” (Illustrated Sydney News 14 November 1889)
Arrived in Victoria (likely) March 1877 aboard the vessel “Assam”. Listed as an “adult” but does not appear to have been accompanied. Was an opera singer with the Sam Lazar Italian Opera Company.
He became a singing teacher in Sydney – continued to paint and exhibit with Art Society of NSW. Was on Committee for several years. During this period, he lived on Hunter Street Sydney and was affiliated with the Italian Impressionists, Rubbo, Nerli etc. (Sydney Morning Herald (26th December 1909- Memiors of Phil May)
Several text books documenting this period of Australian impressionism, have indicated that Steffani was Italian.
In August 1898 Steffani and his wife left for Europe with the young Queensland singer, Florence Mary Schmidt (later married to the sculptor Derwent WOOD) who Steffani had tutored. They spent time and Florence studied in Italy, Paris and London.
Steffani and his wife returned to Australia in 1902 but then returned to London several years later.
Illustration of Steffani is in article he wrote about Australian singers in London – 3 August 1902.
Steffani died in London in March 1931 at the age of 79 (born circa 1852)
Arthur Stevens was born 4th Quarter of 1852 at Hinckley and an Arthur Stevens died 1st Quarter 1931 (Age 78) at Hinckley. This is likely Arturo Steffani (1852 – 1931)
Compiled with the help of Col Fullgar of Integrity Resolutions
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Campbell John 1855-1924view full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘John Campbell Born: 1855- Died: 1924
A scenic artist, sign writer and decorator, John Campbell migrated to Australia from Scotland probably in the early 1880s, working in New South Wales and Queensland before moving to Western Australia around the turn of the 20th century.
His detailed house portraits and landscapes in oil and watercolour form a valuable record of late colonial buildings and cities, particularly Perth, and he is represented in the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Mitchell Library and the Caroline Simpson Library of the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales. He is included in two broad historical surveys of colonial Western Australian art and was the subject of a monographic exhibition at the Art Gallery of Western Australia in 2003.
Represented:
State Library of NSW
Royal WA Historical Society
National Gallery of Australia
University of Western Australia
Homes A court Collection
Historic Houses Trust Conservation Resource Centre- NSW
Art Gallery of Western Australia’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Huddletone William Bennettview full entry
Reference: Tree Houses New Guinea, 1891, and Port Hacking National Park, 1892, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Castle John Down 1858-1928 attributedview full entry
Reference: Marine painting, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Dawson Frederickview full entry
Reference: Marine painting, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Frederick Dawson who worked as a painter of ships from the 1890s to the 1920s. Dawson taught in Port Adelaide and captured some of the most significant coastal traders and ketches working in South Australian coastal waters.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Forster William 1840-1891view full entry
Reference: Marine painting, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Eustace Alfred William 1820-1907 essayview full entry
Reference: A pair of Victorian oils, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Born: 1820 Berkshire, UK
Died: 1907  Chiltern, Victoria, Australia
A painter, taxidermist, musician and shepherd, Eustace began his working life as gamekeeper for the Earl of Craven at Ashdown Park, Berkshire, like his father. In 1847 Alfred married Sarah Anne Collins; they had two sons and four daughters. After arriving at Melbourne in the Ballangeich on 20 August 1851, Eustace was employed by his brother-in-law’s brother, Jason Withers, as a shepherd on the El Dorado and Ullina squatting runs at Black Dog Creek near Chiltern, Victoria. There he always carried a small box of oils or watercolours in his swag so that from his camp he could experiment with colour and techniques in his painting. Said to have been self-taught, he must have had some previous art training as his endeavours to capture the spirit and moods of the Australian bush were in a most competent European academic style.
His oil painting of the 1856 Woolshed gold rush is one of only two known pictures of this significant field (Burke Memorial Museum). He also recorded the arrival of the first Murray River steamboat to reach Albury. These paintings, together with others of important goldmines and town views he executed, are of great value to the history of North-East Victoria.
Canvas and board not being readily available, Eustace turned to using the large eucalyptus leaves that grew in the district up to 15 cm wide by 10 cm long. In a later letter to the editor of the Argus , he wrote that he first substituted flat leaves for canvas when tending sheep in the Ovens district during the goldrush of 1851-52. A report in the Sydney press in 1863 described several of his works in this medium:
They are painted on the leaves of a description of eucalyptus, unknown in this part of Australia, but which we are told is common in many parts of the south-western interior. The leaves are nearly circular and are a little more than three inches [7.6 cm] in diameter. The scenes depicted on them are all descriptive of Australian bush life, and are apparently in watercolour, highly varnished … The leaves before being painted have evidently been carefully dried and flattened, so that the surface is as smooth and even as card board. With the exception that the colours, from the brightness of the varnish, are somewhat “loud”, the effect produced is of the very highest order.
In adopting the Australian bush as his central theme and in using gum leaves Eustace earned himself the title ‘Bush Artist’, although during the 1850s and 1860s he worked as a house decorator and signwriter at Albury, NSW. He taught music, played the cornet, violin and guitar and supplied the music for early Albury dances. He wrote poetry and practised taxidermy as well as painting. Most of his best works are signed and they often contain two or more birds on the wing against the sky. He also painted oils on board, canvas, card and tin.
In January 1857 the Argus reprinted an extract from the Albury Border Post discussing four paintings by Eustace: Roper’s Point , Camping Out , A Group of Australian Trees and The First Glimpse of Albury. In 1863 Eustace held an art union at Field’s Horse and Jockey Inn at Albury to dispose of a number of his oil paintings. A large painting of the Reid’s Creek Falls near Beechworth, a scene on the Murray River Flats with the river in flood, a landscape on a sheep-run, and a roadside public house with travellers camping nearby were among the prizes. Other large oils on canvas survive, but it was his gum leaves that brought him fame. In 1866 he showed a number of oil paintings on gum leaves at the Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition. (His oil painting of a Murray River landscape was shown at the same time by the Beechworth bank manager A.K. Shepherd.)
Albert and Caroline le Souëf lent two of Eustace’s gum leaves decorated with Australian scenes to the 1869 Melbourne Public Library Exhibition. At both the 1872 Victorian Intercolonial and the 1873 London International exhibitions George Bancroft showed ‘a case containing a stuffed opossum, with bush sketches in oil on gum leaves, painted by Mr Eustace, a shepherd near Albury’. His treatment of sky and clouds brought praise from critics of his day. The Melbourne Age reported in 1876: ‘Eustace’s celebrated paintings on gum-leaves are again attracting attention … Mr. Eustace is an elegant artist … he seems without effort to catch the colour and spirit of Australian scenery’. Six of his oil on gumleaf landscapes of the Albury district were sent to the 1886 London Colonial and Indian Exhibition.
Eustace held another art union at Ballarat in 1884 to exhibit nine of his paintings. In 1893 he held a solo exhibition of gumleaf paintings at Stevens’s Gallery, Elizabeth Street, Melbourne. That year Queen Victoria, through the Secretary of State for the Colonies, thanked him for the ‘interesting paintings with which Her Majesty has been much pleased’. By 1896 he was receiving orders for gumleaf paintings from nearly all the capitals of Europe, and examples of his work were acknowledged by the Emperor Frederick of Germany and the Tsar of Russia as well as by the Governors of NSW and Victoria.
The renowned ‘Bush Artist’ died on 29 May 1907 and was buried in Chiltern New Cemetery.
Text by Robert W. P Ashley 1992.
Alfred Eustace is represented in various State and regional public collections.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Williams Edith Elizabeth 1868-1956 essayview full entry
Reference: Sweet September, 1895, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Born: Sydney 1868
Died: Sydney 1956
Miss Edith Williams was born in Sydney, 1868. Her older sister Caroline Gertrude Williams was also an artist. The sisters exhibited in NSW c 1890-1920.
Miss Edith Williams was a talented painter who travelled to Paris in 1903 with two other female artists, Miss C Gertrude Williams (her sister) and Miss E Cusack to further their art careers.
She exhibited with the Society of Women Painters and the Art Society of NSW.
William’s lived in Holmwood ave, Strathfield in the 1890s.
In 1925 she married Campbell Pitt Cotton-Stapleton a commander in the Australian Navy.
Thanks to Col Fullagar of Integrity Resolutions for research undertaken.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Gerrard Charles Frederick 1849-1904view full entry
Reference: Two oil paintings c1890, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Charles Frederick Gerrard
Born: West Derby UK 1849
Died: 10th April 1904 Liverpool Sydney
Maritime and landscape Painter. His best known works depict maritime scenes of the Americas Cup and various American marine events.
Painted from the Hawkesbury River to the Blue Mountains and outer western regions.
Exhibited with the Royal Art Society, Sydney. 1884’

and

‘Percy Lindsay (b.1870- d.1952)
Painter, etcher and cartoonist, was born in Creswick, Victoria, the eldest brother of Lionel , Norman , Daryl, Ruby and Isabel Lindsay (and other non-artist siblings). Percy was educated at Creswick Grammar School, which all the boys attended, where he edited the unofficial school magazine the Boomerang (followed in turn by Lionel and Norman). He was revered by his brothers for the way he was able to maximise life’s pleasures, especially for his success in romancing the daughters of local miners and shopkeepers. According to his brother Daryl, “he took life as it came, extracting all he could get out of it at the moment” (The Leafy Tree p 62). Unlike his younger brothers, Lionel and Norman, who left Creswick as soon as they could, he lived at home until 1897. His first art lessons came when the watercolourist Miller Marshall began to hold occasional classes at Creswick. Later Walter Withersestablished formal classes in landscape class . After the Withers School folded Percy studied art in Ballarat under Frederick Sheldon before starting his own school at the old Creswick School of Mines.
His brother Daryl, who did not approve of Percy’s lifestyle nevertheless admired his Creswick landscapes of the 1890s, and described them as “the best things he ever did”. Lionel, who with Norman was forging a career as a black and white artist in Melbourne, and was concerned for the financial future of the family persuaded Percy to join them. In Melbourne he happily adopted the lifestyle of the self conscious bohemians, illustrating for the Hawklet as well as other publications. He resisted Lionel’s pleas to attend classes at the National Gallery School, preferring to spend his money and time on the pleasures of life. This period is best described in his drawing,’Smoke Night, Victorian Artists’ Society 1906’ (ink 34.1 × 25.1 cm, BFAG, published Lone Hand (1907?) & ill. Hanson, cat.113). Despite his indolent lifestyle Percy was domestically quite meticulous, so it became a family joke when his sister, the decidedly undomestic but artistically ambitious, Ruby Lindsay joined him as his housekeeper in 1903.
In 1906 Percy married Jessie Hammond, an old girlfriend, the daughter of a grocer. Their son, Peter Hammond Lindsay (also an artist), was born in 1908. Because he was amiable, unambitious, talented and had a family to support, friends helped put freelance work in his direction and he produced a considerable amount of commercial illustration.
In 1917 Percy moved to Sydney, where he took over from Lionel as principal illustrator for the NSW Bookstall Company. In 1919-26 he illustrated 33 books for it. Although his nephew Jack Lindsay ( Life Rarely Tells 1982, 252) said Percy’s illustrations were ‘rather bad’, the Triad (10 August 1923, 40) thought they were appropriate for the intended audience:
“Far and wide they [Bookstall books] go, to a special audience of simple folk. To that audience the opulent thighs of the circus-lady in Mr. Percy Lindsay’s cover for the late J.D. Fitzgerald’s collection of tent-yarns will give great satisfaction. The popularity of big legs, which has decayed in the effete cities, holds still outback. There is something appealing about Mr. Lindsay’s fat ladies, something so timid as to be almost babylike. Percy draws them on Sunday mornings after prayers, when he is all warmed-up with satisfaction as he reflects on the infinite goodness of Providence” (quoted Mills, 34).
His black and white art, especially his contributions to the Lone Hand and theBulletin sustained him financially, but his main interest remained painting, especially oil painting. In the 1920s he was influenced by Elioth Gruner’s practice of painting into the light. Some of his most delightful paintings of this period include studies of Norman Lindsay’s garden at Springwood, as well as studies of the boatsheds on the old industrial sites of Sydney Harbour.
His brother Daryl regarded him as “the best painter and colourist of us all. Percy had no claims to draughtsmaship and was a mediocre black and white artist which brought him enough to live on. But he had one thing, a true feeling for colour and perhaps, quite unconscious of it, a natural colour sense.” (p164)
The Mitchell Library holds 465 original cartoons by Percy drawn 1919-46 for theBulletin , including the undated The New Rouseabout (1940s) – a woman with a vacuum cleaner in a shearing shed (ML Px*D479/127). Also gags about high-rise flats, working-class women etc.
A longtime member of the Black and White Artists’ Club, Lindsay’s retrospective exhibition (BFAG) included a smock decorated for him in 1940 by fellow members, including Jack Baird , Jolliffe , Will Mahony , Joan Morrison , Emile Mercier ,Jim Russell , John Santry, Ted Scorfield and Unk White (offered Christie’s Australia, Australian and European Paintings , Melbourne 27 & 28 April 1998, lot 318, and included in SH Ervin b/w exhibition 1999, p.c.). Percy’s health failed after he was knocked down by a motor car in North Sydney at the age of eighty and his helath never fully recovered. At his funeral, the cartoonist Unk White shouted “Three Cheers for old Perce”, and the mourners all joined in (p29).’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Lindsay Percy 1870-1952 essayview full entry
Reference: Three oil paintings c1890, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Webb George Alfred John 1861-1949view full entry
Reference: A Native Duel, 1907, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘George Alfred John Webb
Born: 1861
Died: 1949
A portrait and landscape painter, Webb studied painting in England and Europe before emigrating to Australia around 1890, but could have been as early as 1888. His older sister Frances “Fanny” Webb had married the painter Charles Rolando (1844-1893) around 1874, moving to Australia in 1885 and setting up a studio in Grey Street, East Melbourne.
Webb lived and worked first in Melbourne, painting landscapes around Fernshaw and Gippsland Lakes which Rolando also favoured, then 1890 he moved to Tasmania. He returned to Melbourne in 1891, where he married Christina Lake in 1892 and spent their honeymoon in Europe.
In 1897 they moved to  Adelaide where he opened a studio in Broken Hill Chambers, then in Brookman Building, where he also conducted painting and drawing classes. He moved to Steamship Building, Currie Street sometime before 1914. He joined the South Australian Society of the Arts soon after his arrival, and proved to be an active member, participating in most exhibitions and was for some years its vice president.
In 1910 he held a one-man exhibition. Only one portrait was shown, (Chief Justice Samuel Way), with dozens of seascapes and landscapes in both watercolour and oils: scenes in the Victorian mallee and fern gullies, the Adelaide hills, on the River Torrens, the Buffalo Ranges (Victoria), the valley just below the viaduct near Blackwood, on the Belair Road, at Victor Harbor, Port Elliot, on the gulf coast, Backstairs Passage,near Strathalbyn, from the summit of Mount Lofty, and the Botanic Park. “Sunset on Lake Alexandrina” and “A Bushfire in the Grampians” created considerable interest.
Webb painted many portraits of the prominent business, social and political identities in Adelaide and Melbourne.’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Fullwood Albert Henry 1863-1930view full entry
Reference: Jenolan Caves c1880, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Fullwood Albert Henry 1863-1930view full entry
Reference: Jenolan Caves c1880, see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Houstone - The John Houstone Collectionview full entry
Reference: The John Houstone Collection, auction Raffan, Kelleher and Thomas,
Publishing details: 7 March 2017
Ref: 1000
Lober Angelaview full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald article by Nick Galvin. Includes photographic portrait of artist with one of her works.
Publishing details: SMH, 19 May, 2017, p15.
Ref: 137
Barber Connie 1922-2017view full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald obituary. Poet and painter. ‘Connie benefited from the growing independence of her children. As her time became more her own, she dived back into painting, drawing and art classes. Her painting logbook records five solo exhibitions and 29 other shows.
She devoted a number of these years to "writing" icons, using an instruction manual from the fifth century. This involved finding rabbit skins and double-walled, cast-iron glue pots to produce the glue for the preparation of the surface. According to tradition she prepared the paints with egg yolks, sculpting the leftover whites into pavlovas.’

Publishing details: SMH, 27 April, 2017
Ref: 137
Joachim - The Denis Joachim Collection auction Part 1view full entry
Reference: The Denis Joachim Collection auction catalogue, Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 19 June 2016.
Publishing details: Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 19 June 2016.
Joachim - The Denis Joachim Collection auction Part IIview full entry
Reference: The Denis Joachim Collection auction catalogue, Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017.
Publishing details: Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017
Lang L ‘Corroboree, 1913’view full entry
Reference: see lot 18, The Denis Joachim Collection auction catalogue, Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017.
Publishing details: Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017
Lang L ‘Corroboree, 1913’view full entry
Reference: see lot 18, The Denis Joachim Collection auction catalogue, Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017.
Publishing details: Mossgreen Auctions, Melbourne, 28 June 2017
Murphy Yvette view full entry
Reference: see GILDINGS AUCTIONEERS, UK, 18 July, 2017, lot 315:
Set of six paintings by Yvette Murphy, scenes in New South Wales, oil on artists boards, 19 x 24cm, and three works 14 x 19cm, (6)
Duprez Alphonseview full entry
Reference: see The Sydney Morning Herald from Sydney, New South Wales, May 28, 1910 · Page 19: THE DUPREZ BROTHERS, .
ALPHONSE DUPREZ and CLAUDE DUPREZ, CONTINENTAL - ARTISTS. Thé work of both BROTHERS DUPREZ has met
with marked appreciation in ' England, and on the Continent. Both Artists have been represented at the PARIS SALON, and at most of the important Galleries and Exhibitions abroad. DURINO A VISIT TO NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA, THE ARTISTS PAINTED MANY FAMED
BEAUTY SPOTS. BEAUTIFUL OLD ' .ENGLISH, HOMESTEADS. HARVESTING SCENES, RIVER AND LOCH SCOTTISH AND ITALIAN SCENES, IN ADDITION TO THE BEAUTY SPOTS OF NEW ZEALAND. AND AUSTRALIA. CATALOGUES MAY BE HAD FREE, PER POST. ON APPLICATION TO THE AUCTIONEERS AT THE CENTRAL AND COMMODIOUS ROOMS
OF JAMES R. LAWSON". AND LITTLE,
FINE ART FURNITURE AND GENERAL
AUCTIONEERS,
128-130 PITT-STREET, NEAR KING STREET, ON MONDAY NEXT, 30TH MAY [1910]. FROM 10 O'CLOCK. A.M. TO 6 O'CLOCK P.M.
Duprez Claudeview full entry
Reference: see The Sydney Morning Herald from Sydney, New South Wales, May 28, 1910 · Page 19: THE DUPREZ BROTHERS, .
ALPHONSE DUPREZ and CLAUDE DUPREZ, CONTINENTAL - ARTISTS. Thé work of both BROTHERS DUPREZ has met
with marked appreciation in ' England, and on the Continent. Both Artists have been represented at the PARIS SALON, and at most of the important Galleries and Exhibitions abroad. DURINO A VISIT TO NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA, THE ARTISTS PAINTED MANY FAMED
BEAUTY SPOTS. BEAUTIFUL OLD ' .ENGLISH, HOMESTEADS. HARVESTING SCENES, RIVER AND LOCH SCOTTISH AND ITALIAN SCENES, IN ADDITION TO THE BEAUTY SPOTS OF NEW ZEALAND. AND AUSTRALIA. CATALOGUES MAY BE HAD FREE, PER POST. ON APPLICATION TO THE AUCTIONEERS AT THE CENTRAL AND COMMODIOUS ROOMS
OF JAMES R. LAWSON". AND LITTLE,
FINE ART FURNITURE AND GENERAL
AUCTIONEERS,
128-130 PITT-STREET, NEAR KING STREET, ON MONDAY NEXT, 30TH MAY [1910]. FROM 10 O'CLOCK. A.M. TO 6 O'CLOCK P.M.
CERAMICS FROM THE UNIVERSITY COLLECTIONview full entry
Reference: CERAMICS FROM THE UNIVERSITY COLLECTION, 1990, Works by 22 Artists [to be indexed]

Publishing details: Fine Arts Gallery University Centre, Sandy Bay, Hobart
Binding: Paperback
Illustrated with B&W pictures, 1990
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: The Elementary Forms of Religious Life by Emile Durkheim. From Wikipedia: The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (French: Les formes élémentaires de la vie religieuse), published by French sociologist Émile Durkheim in 1912, is a book that analyzes religion as a social phenomenon. Durkheim attributes the development of religion to the emotional security attained through communal living. His study of Totemic societies in Australia led to a conclusion that the animal or plant that each clan worshipped as a sacred power was in fact that society itself.[1]:201 Halfway through the text, Durkheim inquisites that, "So if [the totem animal] is at once the symbol of the god and of the society, is that not because the god and the society are only one."[1]:206
According to Durkheim, early humans associated such feelings not only with one another, but as well with objects in their environment. This, Durkheim believed, led to the ascription of human sentiments and superhuman powers to these objects, in turn leading to totemism. The essence of religion, Durkheim finds, is the concept of the sacred, that being the only phenomenon which unites all religions. "A religion," writes Durkheim, "is a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden—beliefs and practices which unite into a single moral community called a Church, all those who adhere to them."[2] Durkheim Concludes:
In summing up, then, we must say that society is not at all the illogical or a-logical, incoherent and fantastic being which it has too often been considered. Quite on the contrary, the collective consciousness is the highest form of the psychic life, since it is the consciousness of the consciousnesses. Being placed outside of and above individual and local contingencies, it sees things only in their permanent and essential aspects, which it crystallizes into communicable ideas. At the same time that it sees from above, it sees farther ; at every moment of time, it embraces all known reality ; that is why it alone can furnish the mind with the moulds which are applicable to the totality of things and which make it possible to think of them. It does not create these moulds artificially ; it finds them within itself ; it does nothing but become conscious of them.(445)
Durkheim means that the symbolization of the collective consciousness is done through the totemic animal. It is through this 'flag' that Australian Aboriginals become conscious of themselves within a system of knowledge given by the group itself.[1]:445
Durkheim examined religion using such examples as Pueblo Indian rain dances, the religions of aboriginal tribes in Australia, and alcoholic hallucinations.’
Publishing details: OUP, 2008, reissue, pb, 358pp, with index
Lahm Hartmuthview full entry
Reference: see " ARTISTS' SPRING FEVER BALL 1947. Leaflet listing ‘Order of Proceedings’. Held at THE TROCODERO, George St, Sydney, 7th Nov 1947. Features a cartoon style drawing by "Norton", presumably, Roslaeen Norton, aka-"The Witch of Kings Cross"...Some of the people who attended were of course famous illustrators of the era, names like Stan Cross, Brodie Mack, Hardmuth Lahm (who get a mention in the order of proceedings..."1.30 Brodie Mack discovered in car-park with stream-lined model..."
Fitzjames Michaelview full entry
Reference: An ABC of Bile by Michael Fitzjames (author and illustrator).
Publishing details: Yellow Press, 1994, 52pp card covers, np, with book launch invitation insered
Fitzjames Michaelview full entry
Reference: from DAAO: ‘Michael Fitzjames b. 1948
Also known as M. F. J. Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator). Prolific contemporary Sydney based painter, designer and illustrator. A member of the Australian Black and White Artists Club, Fitzjames has won several Stanleys, painter and illustrator, was born in Melbourne. His first exhibition of his drawings was at Sweeney Reed’s Strines Gallery, Melbourne, in the late 1960s (acc. SMH 16 March 2002, p.29: article on Sweeney Reed by Susan Wyndham. Gallery only existed 1965-69 however there is some speculation that the gallery was still open in 1971.) He studied at the Tasmania School of Art, Hobart, in 1974-75 (Dip Fine Arts 1976). He lived in Europe in 1977-80 where he worked as an illustrator on the London Guardian (1978-80). Back in Australia he drew for the National Times (1980-89) and for many other magazines and newspapers, including Nation Review , Living Daylights , Digger , Age Monthly Review , Harper’s Bazaar and MJ Magazine . 'Australia’s magnificent cartoonists’ ( Bulletin 12 November 1985, 99-101) noted:
'M. F. J. of the National Times sent this coy note: “I disappeared pursued by the bailiffs only to reappear in The National Times in 1980”. Was born in Melbourne, is male.’
Since 1990 he has worked as an illustrator in Sydney, predominantly for the Sydney Morning Herald .
A member of the Australian Black and White Artists Club, Fitzjames has won several Stanleys (see Lindesay 1994). He had 11 solo exhibitions in 1970-92, mainly at Sydney’s Macquarie Galleries, and was included in the 1987 Lewers Bequest & PRAG exhibition, The Black and White Tradition . An exhibition of his paintings was held at Sydney in March-April 1996. His Sydney dealer, Josef Lebovic, has a collection of original works, including 'Nature Mort’ (nude) 1976, coloured inks. An anthology of Fitzjames’s drawings has also been published.
Works include black and whitedrawing of sybaritic Leo Schofield and the Good Food Guide c.1989 (Mitchell Library ABWACC PX D586) reused 'Artists and Cartoonists in Black and White’, S.H. Ervin Gallery 1999; 'Keating and the Deficit Daleks’, published SMH 4 November 1994 (original ML PxD700/71); 'Rougher than usual handling’ (Justice drunk on judge’s lap) used as cover of Justinian 75 (December 1995); 'Here’s Johnny’, published SMH 23 August 1996 and exhibited in Bringing the House Down: 12 Months of Australian Political Humour (Canberra: National Museum of Australia/ Old Parliament House exhibition, 1997), cat.7; and 'On the beach’ and 'Circus clowns’ in Bringing the House Down 2001 (and presumably others in other years: see NMA website). Has a dealer in Melbourne and (since 1997) Josef Lebovic in Sydney.
Writers:
Kerr, Joan
Date written:
1996
Last updated:
2007’
Kovaks Ildikoview full entry
Reference: Ildiko Kovacs - Inner Cycle, Martin Brown Contemporary catalogue.21 works all illustrated in colour. Photograph of artist. No biographical information.
Publishing details: Martin Brown Contemporary, 2017, 40pp. Price list inserted.
Ref: 223
John Buckley Collectionview full entry
Reference: John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Ref: 1000
Sansom Garethview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Gascoigne Rosalieview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Partos Paulview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Henson Billview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Johnson Timview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Clark Tonyview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Persson Stiegview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Boston Paulview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Atkins Peterview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Senbergs Janview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Jacks Robertview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Hickey Daleview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Giardino Pasqualeview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Oliver Bronwynview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Bridgewater Robertview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Hunter Robertview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Browne Andrewview full entry
Reference: see John Buckley Collection of Modern & Contemporary Australian Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 13 May 2014
Bill & Johneen Tilley Collectionview full entry
Reference: Bill & Johneen Tilley Collection.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 27 May 2014
Ref: 1000
Warren & Bunty Bonython Collectionview full entry
Reference: Warren & Bunty Bonython Collection
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 4 May 2014
Ref: 1000
Michele Asprey Collectionview full entry
Reference: Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Ref: 1000
Piccinini Patriciaview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Laing Rosemaryview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Moffatt Traceyview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Klippell Robertview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Macpherson Robertview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Wrigley Paul Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Griggs Davidview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Cullen Adamview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Tuckson Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Ou Selinaview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Gill Simrynview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Bawden Lionelview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Brown Lyndell & Charles Greenview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Green Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Wei Guenview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
Maguire Timview full entry
Reference: see Michele Asprey Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 November, 2014
John & Marita McIntosh Collectionview full entry
Reference: John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
Streeton Arthur 2 early worksview full entry
Reference: see John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
Roberts Tom La Favorita 9x5view full entry
Reference: see John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
McCubbin Frederick Shelling Peasview full entry
Reference: see John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
Chevalier Nicholas Mount Abruptview full entry
Reference: see John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
Perceval John Carlton Street 1943view full entry
Reference: see John & Marita McIntosh Collection of Australian Contemporary Art. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 15 October, 2013
Steven & Jane Wilson Collectionview full entry
Reference: Steven & Jane Wilson Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 16 June, 2013
Ref: 1000
Anderson Peter b1956view full entry
Reference: see Steven & Jane Wilson Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 16 June, 2013
Ruth and John Clemente Collectionview full entry
Reference: Ruth and John Clemente Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 11 November 2012
Ref: 135
Errington Elizabeth 1808-1869 11 watercolours and drawingsview full entry
Reference: see Ruth and John Clemente Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 11 November 2012
Duterrau Benjamin the Walker Childrenview full entry
Reference: see Ruth and John Clemente Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 11 November 2012
Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Artview full entry
Reference: Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Ref: 1000
Sansom Garethview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Christmann Gunterview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Walker Thornton Jview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Mais Hilarieview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Hickey Daleview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Ball Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
McGillick Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Partos Paulview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Taylor Howardview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Frank Daleview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Wolfhagen Phillipview full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Gascoigne Rosalie 1917-1999view full entry
Reference: see Private Collection of Fine Contemporary Australian Art. 64 lots with essays on 14 of the lots.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 23 October 2012
Ross & Rona Clarke Collectionview full entry
Reference: Ross & Rona Clarke Collection. Mainly Aboriginal Art.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 9 September 2012
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Ross & Rona Clarke Collection. Mainly Aboriginal Art.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 9 September 2012
Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collectionview full entry
Reference: Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Ref: 1000
Beckett Clarice 1887-1935view full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Beckett Clarice 1887-1935 9 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Nolan Sidney 5 early worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Hester Joy 1920-1960 5 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Cook William Delafield 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Looby Keith view full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Whiteley Brett Abstract 1958view full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Blackman Charles Housefront 1954view full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Durrant Ivan 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Tillers Imants 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Young John view full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Langlois Chris 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Wadelton David 5 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Brennan Angela 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Sandra Powell & Andrew King Collection. Includes biographical information on a number of artists,
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014


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