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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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Showing 1,000 records of 1,000 total. We are displaying one thousand.

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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.
From Michael Treloar Antiquarian Booksellers:
The monumental pictorial record of Maori life and customs by Augustus Earle (1793-1838), and an absolute rarity. 'In October 1827 he sailed on the "Governor Macquarie" and spent eight months between Hokianga and the Bay of Islands. He was convinced that no native race he had studied on his travels could compare with the New Zealanders, that "splendid race of men" with "a natural elegance and ease of manner".... Earle painted accurate representations of Maori customs, occasions and domestic scenes ... He joined the "Beagle" on 28 October 1831 as "artist supernumary [sic] with victuals", and became a friend of the young Charles Darwin. But by the time the "Beagle" reached South America Earle was ill, and he was forced to leave the ship at Montevideo in August 1832 ... Augustus Earle was probably the first English freelance painter to travel the world. He was the first European artist to establish himself for a time in New Zealand and make a prolonged study of a part of the country and a number of its people' (TeAra/DNZB).

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
Zhilong Qi 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
Jeffrey Michael 2 works 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
Hirata Mari 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
Gordon & Jeanette King Collectinview full entry
Reference: Gordon & Jeanette King Collectin.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 10 March 2014
Ref: 1000
Phipps Jennifer Estate ofview full entry
Reference: The Estate of Jennifer Phipps. Mossgreen auction.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 28 February 2016.
Ref: 1000
Barry & Anne Pang Collectionview full entry
Reference: The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included. Includes over 50 works by David Bromley with essay. About 20 works by Charles Blackman with essay. numerous works by Nolan with essay, 2 major Russell Drysdale oils.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Ref: 1000
Bromley Davidview full entry
Reference: in The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included. Includes over 50 works by David Bromley with essay.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included. 2 major Russell Drysdale oils.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included. About 20 works by Charles Blackman with essay.

Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included. Numerous works by Nolan.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: see The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Amor Rickview full entry
Reference: see The Barry & Anne Pang Collection. Mossgreen auction. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 18 October 2015.
Alan Boxer Collection of Australian Indigenous Artview full entry
Reference: The Alan Boxer Collection of Australian Indigenous Art. 172 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 17 March 2015.
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see The Alan Boxer Collection of Australian Indigenous Art. 172 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 17 March 2015.
Peter McMahon Collectionview full entry
Reference: The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction, 17 March 2015.
Ref: 1000
Pigott Gwyn Hanssenview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Innes Callumview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Tomescu Aidaview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Hunter Robertview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Senbergs Jan 5 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Whisson Ken 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Bevan Tonyview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
de la Cruz Angela 4 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Quaytman Harveyview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
McNeil Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Clarke Peterview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Klippel Robertview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Funaki Mari 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Venables Prue 10worksview full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Halpern Deborah view full entry
Reference: see The Peter McMahon Collection. 202 works. Artist’s biographies included.
Publishing details: Mossgreen auction,6 March 2016.
Cantor Lucyview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Auctions, Fine Australian & International Art featuring the Ian Gowrie Smith Collection, Melbourne, 02/06/2015, Lot No 60 - Kangaroo Hunt, Margaret River 1911
Oil on canvas, signed and dated lower right: L Cantor 1911, 44 x 64 cm, Est: $8,000-15,000,
Meston Walterview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Auctions, Fine Australian & International Art featuring the Ian Gowrie Smith Collection, Melbourne, 02/06/2015, Lot No. 59 - Sunset, Perth 1898
Oil on canvas on board, signed and dated lower left: Meston 98, 60 x 75 cm, Est: $20,000-30,000, With essay on the work. And:
Our Heritage 1924 (A View of the Swan River from Kings Park)
Oil on canvas, signed and dated lower right: W P Meston 1924, bears Art Gallery of Western Australia exhibition label verso, 96 x 128.5 cm, Est: $50,000-70,000, Mossgreen Auctions, Fine Australian & International Art featuring the Ian Gowrie Smith Collection, Melbourne, 02/06/2015, Lot No. 58
Exhibited: Western Australian Art & Artists, 1900-1950, . Art Gallery of Western Australia, 1987, cat. no. 97. Literature: Janda Gooding, Western Australian Art & Artists, 1900-1950, . Art Gallery of Western Australia, 1987. With essay on the work

Ref: 8.5
Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Menpes Mortimerview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Hall Lindsay Bernard 1859-1935view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Hester Joyview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Boxer Collectionview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information. Includes works from the Alan Boxer Collection
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Boyd Penleighview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Cullen Adamview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Angus Charles Howard 1861-1926 horse racing sceneview full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 28 October 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 28 October 2014, 238pp with index
Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 21 November 2016view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 21 November 2016. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2016
Ref: 1000
Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 29 & 30 August 2016view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 29 & 30 August 2016. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2016
Ref: 1000
Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 2 June 2015view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 2 June 2015. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2015
Ref: 1000
Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014view full entry
Reference: Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Purves Smith Peter 1912-1949view full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Robertson Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Vassilieff Danila Costumiere 1937view full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Grimshaw John Atkinson atttrib Melbourneview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Rhode Kateview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Fine Australian & International Art 24 June 2014. Many lots have essays on the works with biographical information.
Publishing details: Mossgreen, 2014
Tucker Tudor St Georgeview full entry
Reference: in Victorian Victoria : an exhibition showing the early development of public art collections in regional Victoria, works for the exhibition are drawn from the collections of the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Bendigo Art Gallery, Warrnambool Art Gallery and Geelong Art Gallery. Biographical information.
Publishing details: Bendigo Art gallery, 1986, 150th Anniversary publication.
Scheding Stephenview full entry
Reference: Scholastic 1998 Calendar, featuring Great Australian Illustrators. [ Includes photograph of artist and biography]
Publishing details: Scholastic, 1998
Westcott Kimview full entry
Reference: Kim Westcott : north by north-east
by Westcott, Kim

Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, 2007
Ref: 1000
Clayton Ingeview full entry
Reference: see lot 74, John Nicholson Auctioneers, UK, 2 August, 2017, Inge Clayton (1946- ) Australian. “£1000 in £20”, a Collage, Signed, and Inscribed on a label on the reverse, 7” x 5.25”. Artist’s ddress given on label as 72 Redington Road, London, NW3.
Hughes Rayview full entry
Reference: Ray Hughes - Africa. Catlogue for exhibition at Delmar Gallery, Trinity Collecge, Ashfield, Sydney, July 2017. Includes essay on Ray Hughes by Sebastian Smee and transcripts of interviews with Ray Hughes about his collecting of African art.
Publishing details: Delmar Gallery, 2017, pb, np [52pp]separate 6-page catalogue inserted.
TAYLOR THOMAS JOHN DOMVILLE circa 1817-1889view full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia, 16 August, 2017, lot 83: Drawings (1840-1848)
21 sheets
pencil on paper
(sizes various)

1) (Two New South Wales Landscapes) 1840inscribed 'Part of Omeo Plains. head of the Murray River - N. S. Wales - 1840' below upper image; inscribed 'Snowy Mountains from Big Hill 1840 / N.S. Wales hd. of the Murray' lower left36.8 x 25.4 cm2) (Portrait of a Young Aboriginal) 1841inscribed 'Jimmy [Timmy?] a Native boy of Moreton [Bay?] / New South Wales / 1841' lower centre18 x 18 cm3) (An Australian Squatter and a Latin American Woman) 1843verso: ('Nutwith', winner of the 1843 Doncaster St Leger Stakes) 1843inscribed 'An Australian Squatter' lower left; inscribed 'Nutwith' verso12.6 x 26.3 cm(copied from wood engraving in Illustrated London News 23 September 1843, p. 201) 4) Tummaville, Darling Downsbears [C20th?] inscription 'Tummaville Darling Downs / D. Taylor's hut etc.' lower left; inscribed 'Tummaville, Darling Downs / D. Taylor's hut &c' verso21.1. x 35.2 cm5) (Taylor and Rolland's First Camp at 'Tummaville')20.1 x 34.3 cm6) Tummaville, Darling Downs 1844verso: (A Bush Landscape with Two Figures)inscribed 'Tummaville - Darling Downs / N. S. Wales / 1844' lower right; inscribed 'Miss Milman' verso26.5 x 35.3 cm7) (The Long Reach, 'Tummaville') 1845inscribed 'The "Long Reach" on the Broadwater / Tummaville Station Darling Downs / N S Wales 1845' lower right25.9 x 36.1 cm8) ('Tummaville') 1845inscribed '"Tummaville" Cattle run. Darling Downs / N.S. Wales / 1845' lower right25.9 x 36.4 cm9) (View on the Condamine River) 1845inscribed 'Group of Blue Gum trees / in the bed of the Condamine River / Cecil Plains Darling Downs / N.S. - Wales 1845' lower right26.5 x 20.9 cm10) (Bullock dray descending Cunningham's gap, Great Dividing Range)inscribed 'A Squatter's dray of Darling Downs / descending the first pinch in / Cunningham's Gap, Main Range, / on its way to Moreton Bay' lower centre24.5 x 16.4 cm11) "Gee, Smiler!"inscribed 'Gee Smiler! / Darling Downs squatters ascending / the Main Range of Mountains from / Mortton Bay with supplies' lower centre24.5 x 16.4 cm12) (Farmstead Interior)inscribed 'Interior of a [illeg.] House [illeg.]' lower right; inscribed 'very dark' centre right12.6 x 26.4 cm13) (Camp on the Leichhardt River) 1845inscribed 'The return / party encamped / on the Leichardt / River N S Wales / 1845' lower left25.9 x 36.4 cm14) (Search Party's Camp at 'Jimbour' Station) 1845inscribed 'The Party in search of Dr Leichardt / Encamped as H Dennis' / Station. Jimbour. Darling Do\x85 / 8th. Augt. 1845' lower right25.8 x 36.5 cm15) (Search Party's Camp at Dried Beef Creek) 1845inscribed 'Dr Leichardt 7 days camp / on Dogwood Creek when he dried the beef - N S Wales / 16th. Augst 1845' lower right24.4 x 36.4 cm16) (Search Party's Camp at Leichhardt River) 1845inscribed 'The Expedition in search of / Dr Leichardt & party encamped / on the Leichardt River - N S Wale[s] / 27th. Augst 1845' lower right24.8 x 36.5 cm17) (Mt Domville, Darling Downs, Queensland) 1845inscribed 'Mount Domville on the Liechardt ' River / N.S. Wales / 6th. Septr. 1845, lower right25.9 x 36.3 cm18) (Johnny Sleeping) 1845inscribed '"Johnny" asleep - / the black interpreter / of the Expedition - / Leichardt River / 1845' lower right-16.4 x 24.5 cm19) (James Rogers' Camp, Dried Beef Creek) 1845verso: (Aboriginal Mortuary Platform) 1845inscribed 'Rogers' camp / Leichardt 7 days camp' lower right; inscribed '"Pooram" / Dogwood Creek N S Wales / 16th Septr 1845 / [in a later hand?] 'on which the dead are placed to be devoured by / crows & hawks -' verso16.4 x 24.5 cm20) (Interior of Domville Taylor's Hut) 1847bears inscription '"Tummabil" / Darling Downs / Morton Bay / Australia / Interior of the hut of Domville / Taylor sketched by him & the / Painting by George Pickering Chester / 1847' verso18.1 x 23.5 cm21) (Cabin on Board Ship) 1848inscribed 'On board the Steamship / "Avon" 1848 / fm West Indies' lower right21.4 x 25.9 cm

Sketchbook (1840-1848)
32 pages
pencil on paper
13.3 x 23 cm (sheet); 13.3 x 23.5 cm (bound)

f1r: inscribed 'N.S. Wales / Darling Downs Squatters encamped on Frazers Creek' lower centre; f1v: (part of following sketch); f2r: inscribed 'Squatters for Darling / Downs - Encamped / on Byron Plains / N S Wales 1841' lower right; f2v: (part of following sketch); f3r: inscribed 'Jones's (?) Station / Liverpool Plains / N.S. Wales 1841' lower right; f3v: inscribed 'Aborigines of Australia / on the lookout for whitefellows' lower right; f4r: (drawing of aborigines); f4v: inscribed 'Squatters in search of blacks / N S Wales' lower right; f5r: (drawing of men in camp); f5v: (blank); f6r: inscribed 'Darling Downs / N S Wales' lower left; f6v: (no title/inscription - landscape with tent and drays) n.b. sheet cut - one folio missing; f7r: inscribed 'Aborigines of Australia encamped' lower right; f7v: (blank); f8r: inscribed 'Roping Cattle. N.S. Wales' lower right; f8v: (blank); f9r: inscribed '"Camping Out" N S Wales' lower right; f9v: (blank); f10r: inscribed 'A party in search of blacks' lower right; f10v: (blank); f11r: inscribed 'Wool Press Australia' lower centre; f11v: (blank); f12r: inscribed 'Myall Tree / N S Wales'; upper right; inscribed 'from Mitchell's Australia' lower left (Composite of two illustrations from Mitchell: Remarkable tree and Remnant of the Bogan Tribe); f12v: inscribed '"Boyeer" / Cecil Plains / Russell & Brook's / Station - Darling Downs / N.S. Wales / 1845 / Condamine River' centre left; f13r: (part of previous sketch); f13v: (blank); f14r: (no title/inscription - dray with two bullocks and man with whip); f14v: (blank); f15r: inscribed 'Antipodes Island bearing E 27 miles / \xBD N / Lat 49? 35" Lon: 178.? 58" / as seen from the "General Hewitt" on his / voyage from Sydney N S Wales to London / 1st July 1846' upper centre; f15v: (no title/inscription - island seen from the sea); f16r: (part of previous sketch); inscribed 'Centre of Antipodes / Island NE 5 miles / distant - as seen / from the Ship "genl. Hewitt" / on the voyage from / Sydney N S Wales to / London 1st July 1846 / The tops of the mountains / were covered with Snow / size of Island about / 5 miles long -' centre right; f16v: (blank); f17r: inscribed 'An Old Mammy. N S Wales - / fm. Mitchell's Tropical Australia' lower left; inscribed 'Native of N S Wales / fm Mitchell's Tropical Australia' lower right; (Two illustrations from Mitchell: Old native female and Portrait of Bultje); f17v: (no title/inscription - three drawings: woman emptying pot from window onto pedestrian below; interior of squatter's hut; stirrup pump (?)); f18r: inscribed 'Brazilian / Soldier' lower left; inscribed 'Travelling at Pernambuco. / Brazils' centre; inscribed 'Negress at Pernambuco - selling oranges' lower right (fourth drawing with no title/inscription - female figure with missing arm); f18v: (blank); f19r: inscribed 'Shooting blacks / N.S. Wales' lower right; f19v: inscribed 'fm / Mitchell's / Tropical / Australia' crentre right; inscribed '"Ballone" River. N. S Wales'lower right (Illustration from Mitchell St George's Bridge); f20r: inscribed 'Drinking - N S Wales' lower right; f20v: (no title - Aboriginal (?) man and verandah (?) structure); f21r: inscribed 'Roping a bullock. N.S. Wales' lower right; f21v: inscribed 'Modesty' upper left; inscribed 'Catamaran - Pernambuco' centre; inscribed '"Camping out" / N S Wales' upper right; inscribed 'Asleep / "Camping out" / N S Wales' centre right; f22r: inscribed 'In search of a run - N.S. Wales 1840 (?)'lower right; f22v: (no title - comic sketch in ink of man and woman)13.3 x 23 cm (sheet); 13.3 x 23.5 cm (bound)

Journal 1845
38 pages
ink on paper
20 x 32 (sheet); 21.5 x 33 cm (bound)
Provenance
Private Collection, United Kingdom
Private Collection, Perth, by descent from the above
Holt Edwin 1830-1912view full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia, 16 August, 2017, lot 84: EDWIN HOLT
1830-1912
Family Group, Alma Cottage 1874
oil on canvas
signed and dated 'E. F. Holt. 1874.' lower centre
51 x 67.5 cm
Provenance
Private Collection
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Mr Ted Lustig, Melbourne, acquired from the above
Australian and International Art, Sotheby's Australia, Melbourne, 21 November 2006, lot 253, illustrated
Savill Galleries, Sydney (stock 206211) (label verso), acquired from the above
Churchus Stanleyview full entry
Reference: see Ebay item, 24 July, 2017: ABSTRACT, OIL ON BOARD 1960s.

‘STANLEY CHURCHUS BORN 1914
ABSTRACT AND EXPRESSIONIST ARTIST STUDIED UNDER FRED WILLIAMS. EXHIBITED WIDELY FROM 1974.
Kough G Eview full entry
Reference: Hobart Town Courier 19.10.32 page 3 col 1 - visit by the governor and family to Duterrau’s studio in Campbell Street. [see Tasmanian State Archive list of references - ie. Wayn Index] Mentions Kough as a ‘scene painter’.
Law Benjaminview full entry
Reference: see Hobart Town Courier, 4.9.1835: BUST OF THE NATIVE CHIEF WOREDDY.
Mr. Law has the pleasure to announce to the subscribers to this bust, that he has now several copies finished, which as being more central and convenient, where they may be had on application, at the publishing price of L4.4 each. 7th Sept.


Cane Frederick (see du Cane)view full entry
Reference: see Cornwall Chronical [Tasmania] 19.7.51 page 4 col. 4 - Mr Frederick Cane has an exhibition of dissolving views...

du Cane Frederick view full entry
Reference: see Cornwall Chronical [Tasmania] 19.7.51 page 4 col. 4 - Mr Frederick [du] Cane has an exhibition of dissolving views...

Law Benjaminview full entry
Reference: see The Pacificator: discovering the lost [Benjamin Law] bust of George Augustus Robinson by Gareth Knapman
Publishing details: The Latrobe Journal, No 86 December 2010
Ref: 40
Meanjinview full entry
Reference: BRITAIN, Ian. (Ed). PORTRAITS OF THE ARTIST. Meanjin. New writing in Australia. Special double issue. Volume 64. Numbers 1-2, 2005. A double issue of Meanjin magazine featuring intimate
encounters with Judy Cassab, Bill Leak, Arthur Boyd.As well as art by
Stelarc & others [to be indexed fully]
Publishing details: Melb. Meanjin. 2005. Col.Ill.wrapps. 342pp. col plates & b/w ills.
Ref: 1000
Australian Architecture Nowview full entry
Reference: Australian Architecture Now, by Davina Jackson and Chris Johnson. ‘A crucial record of two hundred of the most signicant structures & places created during Australia's unprecedented building boom of the mid-to late- 1990s. Featuring work by Peter Stutchbury & others.’ [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Lond. Thames & Hudson. 2002. 4to. Col.Ill. wrapps. 254pp. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white.
Australian architectureview full entry
Reference: KINGSTON, Daphne. EARLY COLONIAL HOMES OF THE SYDNEY REGION 1788-1838. Early Colonial Homes of the Sydney Region is an important survey of the remaining homes which were constructed within the first 50 years of the new Colony.
Publishing details: Kenthurst. Kangaroo Press. 1990. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 96pp. Some fading to dj at spine. Profusely illustrated in black & white.
Ref: 1000
Missingham Halview full entry
Reference: MISSINGHAM, Hal. GRASS TREES OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA. Blackboys & Black Gins. ‘Hal Misingham's photographic exploration of the Grass Trees of WA. Better known by their shorter name of Blackboys, or Xanthorrhoea, they are a common sight in WA, & are often confused with Black Gins’
Publishing details: Freemantle. Freemantle Arts Centre. 1978. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 64pp. Crease to top edge of wrapps. Chipping to top edge of rst few pages. Profusely illustrated in black & white.
Ref: 1000
Mapmakers of Australiaview full entry
Reference: McCARTHY, J.E. MAPMAKERS OF AUSTRALIA. ‘The history of the Australian Institute of Cartographers. Formed in the early 1950s, the Australian Institute of Cartographers provided maps during a period of rapid development in Australia's resources. It has been training cartographers throughout the country.’
Publishing details: Beaumaris (Vic). Aust Inst Cart. 1988. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 183pp. Some creasing to bottom corners. Name on inside cover. b/w ills.
Ref: 1000
Australian mapsview full entry
Reference: see McCARTHY, J.E. MAPMAKERS OF AUSTRALIA. ‘The history of the Australian Institute of Cartographers. Formed in the early 1950s, the Australian Institute of Cartographers provided maps during a period of rapid development in Australia's resources. It has been training cartographers throughout the country.’
Publishing details: Beaumaris (Vic). Aust Inst Cart. 1988. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 183pp. Some creasing to bottom corners. Name on inside cover. b/w ills.
Johnson Robynview full entry
Reference: (POP-UP BOOK) JOHNSON, Robyn. THE ENCHANTED DOLLS' HOUSE WEDDING. Albert and Lucinda from the beloved 'Enchanted Dolls' House' have pled their troth. Inside four masterfully conceived & constructed pop-up buildings their wedding is planned & presented.
Publishing details: Melb. Five Mile Press. 2007. Folio. Col.ill.bds. 32pp. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white. Flaps and envelopes to open as well as pop-ups.
Ref: 1000
Eora - Mapping Aboriginal Sydneyview full entry
Reference: SMITH, Keith Vincent & BOURKE, Anthony (Curators) EORA. Mapping Aboriginal Sydney 1770-1850. ‘Published to coincide with an exhibition of art & maps of the Aboriginal peoples encountered in the Sydney region between 1770 & 1850. Aboriginal people were being rapidly subsumed by Europeans.’
Publishing details: Syd. State Library of NSW. 2006. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 20pp. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white.
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Meanjin, BRITAIN, Ian. (Ed). PORTRAITS OF THE ARTIST. Meanjin. New writing in Australia. Special double issue. Volume 64. Numbers 1-2, 2005. A double issue of Meanjin magazine featuring intimate
encounters with Judy Cassab, Bill Leak, Arthur Boyd.As well as art by
Stelarc & others
Publishing details: Melb. Meanjin. 2005. Col.Ill.wrapps. 342pp. col plates & b/w ills.
Cassab Judyview full entry
Reference: see Meanjin, BRITAIN, Ian. (Ed). PORTRAITS OF THE ARTIST. Meanjin. New writing in Australia. Special double issue. Volume 64. Numbers 1-2, 2005. A double issue of Meanjin magazine featuring intimate
encounters with Judy Cassab, Bill Leak, Arthur Boyd.As well as art by
Stelarc & others
Publishing details: Melb. Meanjin. 2005. Col.Ill.wrapps. 342pp. col plates & b/w ills.
Leak Billview full entry
Reference: see Meanjin, BRITAIN, Ian. (Ed). PORTRAITS OF THE ARTIST. Meanjin. New writing in Australia. Special double issue. Volume 64. Numbers 1-2, 2005. A double issue of Meanjin magazine featuring intimate
encounters with Judy Cassab, Bill Leak, Arthur Boyd.As well as art by
Stelarc & others
Publishing details: Melb. Meanjin. 2005. Col.Ill.wrapps. 342pp. col plates & b/w ills.
Stelarcview full entry
Reference: see Meanjin, BRITAIN, Ian. (Ed). PORTRAITS OF THE ARTIST. Meanjin. New writing in Australia. Special double issue. Volume 64. Numbers 1-2, 2005. A double issue of Meanjin magazine featuring intimate
encounters with Judy Cassab, Bill Leak, Arthur Boyd.As well as art by
Stelarc & others
Publishing details: Melb. Meanjin. 2005. Col.Ill.wrapps. 342pp. col plates & b/w ills.
Melbourne Art Journalview full entry
Reference: Vols 1, 2 and 5 of Melbourne Art Journal currently in Scheding Library. The others to be acquired and indexed.
Ref: 1000
Sheldon Vincentview full entry
Reference: see Brisbane Courier Mail, 21 July, 1945, p3: VINCENT SHELDON ARTIST, DEAD
Mr. Vincent Sheldon, a well-known Brisbane artist, died suddenly on Thursday at his home at Caboolture. where he and his wife
have lived for some months. Mr. Sheldon was a member of the Half Dozen Group of Artists, being a regular exhibitor at shows
of that society; and, at one time he was a regular exhibitor at annual shows of the Royal Queensand Art Society. He was also a member of the Australian Painter-Etchers' Society in Sydney. Some years ago he
studied in Europe, giving particular attention to etchings and dry points. Mr. Sheldon, who was born and educated at Brisbane, is survived by his widow and two sisters,
Misses Jeanettie and Dot Sheldon.
Whyte Duncan Macgregorview full entry
Reference: See The Sunday Times, Perth, 29 October, 1916, p5: Mr. MacGregor Whyte, an artist ol
unusual ability in oil colors, recently
reached Perth from the Eastern States,
where he has, principally in Queens-
land and New South Wales, - for th«
?last few years, been engaged in study-
ing and painting typical Australian
scenery. For many years Mr. Whytí
trained in the best schools of Paris and
Antwerp, and is a prominent membei
of the Glasgow Art Club. It is his in-
tention to conduct a' class for out-
door painting m the vicinity of Perth
and thus art lovers'who haye the am-
bition to paint from nature now hon
a good opportunity of doing so undei
the direction of a talented artist. Wha1
we have seen of Mr. Whyte's pictures
leads us to admire, the freshness bf hit
landscapes, and the strongly mark«
character of his. portraits and iigur<
work. Some of his canvases, which de-
pict bush and camp life under th(
glowing sun of the northern climes, re-
veal an admirable conception of loca
coloring, and .testify to Mr. Whyt<
having caught the Australian atmos-
phere, which is truly expressed in hil
brushwork. The artist, who wi!
shortly arrange an exhibition of hi¡
pictures, may be communicated wit!
at 93" Northwoed-street, West Leeder
ville. : »
Shaw G Bview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald 13 June 1859, p6: SHAW—May 25th at Strawberry Hills, the wife of Mr. G. B. Shaw, artist, of a daughter.
Stuthridge Alan Mitchellview full entry
Reference: ALAN MITCHELL STUTHRIDGE ( - 2001)
Passed away on 10 October 2001
Aged 76 years ‘Loved son of Inez’.
Father: William Henry Thomas STUTHRIDGE b: 1899 in Sydney, NSW
Mother: Inez Jean MITCHELL b: 1902 in Granville, NSW Australia.
Electoral roll:
Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980
1920S

NAME: Inez Jean Stuthridge RESIDENCE: 1930 - city, Reid, New South Wales, Australia

Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980
1920S

NAME: William Henry Thomas Stuthridge RESIDENCE: 1930 - city, Reid, New South Wales, Australia.

Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980
1920S
NAME: Inez Jean Stuthridge RESIDENCE: 1949 - city, Blaxland, New South Wales, Australia

Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980
1920S NAME: Alan Mitchell StuthridgeRESIDENCE: 1949 - city, Blaxland, New South Wales, Australia.

Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980
1920S

NAME: Alan Mitchell Stuthridge RESIDENCE: 1954 - city, Warringah, New South Wales, Australia.
Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980

*
Reference to estate of Alan Mitchell Stuthridge: The Sydney Morning Herald i
Location: Sydney, New South Wales
Issue Date: Thursday, January 24, 2002
Page 38: ‘...ANY person having any claim UDOn the Estate of ALAN MITCHELL STUTHRIDGE late of ...ANY person having any claim UDOn the Estate of ALAN MITCHELL STUTHRIDGE late of ...’

*

Death Notice Sydney Morning Herald 13 October 1953 p20 (may be same family): MITCHELL Douglas William.
October 6, at Brisbane loved husb-
band of Belle, father of Shirley and
Dale, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mitchell, brother of Arnold
and Inez (Mrs. I. Stuthridge).
1920S
View Image NAME: Alan Mitchell StuthridgeRESIDENCE: 1968 - city, berowra, New South Wales, Australia [with mother Inez]
Connor Desmond view full entry
Reference: won FORTUNA DRAWING COMPETITION, 1945, see The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) Sat 15 Dec 1945, Page 14, Address given as 101 Alice st., Newtown.
Haire Carl Sylvester view full entry
Reference: won 2nd Prize, FORTUNA DRAWING COMPETITION, 1945, see The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) Sat 15 Dec 1945, Page 14, Address given as 6
Ashley street, Waverley.
Hamilton Thomas James
view full entry
Reference: won 3rd Prize, FORTUNA DRAWING COMPETITION, 1945, see The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) Sat 15 Dec 1945, Page 14, Address given as Bank Hotel, King street, Newtown.
Gren Nilsview full entry
Reference: Spencer Jon Helfen Fine Arts (US), provides the following information:

• Gren first lived in New York City, where he worked for several years as a designer for a pattern manufacturer, but by 1925 he was living in southern California. He resided in Los Angeles, studying with Stanton Macdonald Wright and exhibiting with the Painters and Sculptors of Los Angeles in 1926, and with the Modern Art Society of Los Angeles that same year.
• In the late 1920s Nils Gren moved to San Francisco, exhibiting with the San Francisco Art Association in 1928 and 1929.
• Around 1930 Gren destroyed all his earlier work [in a fire] but he went on to produce paintings with what became his signature style – nocturnes and fantastic images of people, places and objects.
• Gren’s paintings were widely exhibited, including at the Paul Elder Gallery, where he had a solo show in 1932. (The San Francisco Chronicle described Gren’s paintings in these terms: ‘There is a peculiar sombreness, both of color and of light and shadow, in his work [and]… a certain characteristic twist of line and form [that] makes his pictures tensely alive.’ His work also was exhibited in many museum shows, including the Oakland Art Gallery in 1932 and 1934, the San Francisco Museum of Art Inaugural Exhibition in 1935, the Palace of the Legion of Honor, and also at the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939 and California State Fairs throughout the decade.
• During the 1930s, Nils Gren produced lithographs for the Works Progress Administration, and worked with other artists on murals for San Francisco’s Mission High School. He also produced a colourful mural for his friend, restaurateur and former bootlegger Isadore Gomez, for Gomez’ 848 Pacific Street restaurant.
• A 1940 exhibition of Gren’s paintings at the San Francisco Museum of Art prompted these comments from San Francisco Chronicle critic Alfred Frankenstein: ‘Mr. Gren’s best pictures are fantastic, moody, imaginative landscapes in oil, with the looping rhythms characteristic of his approach.’ Later that same year Nils Gren passed away in San Francisco. His work is included in many public collections, including the Smithsonian Institution and the Oakland Museum.

[There is a very interesting connection in relation to Gren studying with Stanton Macdonald Wright in Los Angeles. Roy de Maistre had read W. Huntington Wright’s Modern Painting, published in 1915, which had a final chapter on ‘Synchromism’ with a colour plate of the painting Arm Organisation in Blue-Green by Stanton Macdonald Wright who was the author’s brother. Humphrey Macqueen in The Black Swan of Trespass has noted the ‘striking resemblance’ of de Maistre’s 1919 colour harmony paintings to the Macdonald Wright work.
]


Gren Nilsview full entry
Reference: Art dealer, Steve Macfarlane from Santa Barbara, US, wrote to Stephen Scheding to say that ‘Gren’s works were very rare, most being destroyed by the fire in the late 1930's.’ He added that Gren had committed suicide in 1940 [However this is incorrect. Another correspondent has provided the following information: ‘Nils Gren died 5-days after entering the St. Mary’s hospital in San Francisco suffering from Bronchopneumonia in August of 1940(Source: Death Certificate). He did have an exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Art in April of that year (The San Francisco Examiner, Mar 24, 1940 Page 41). However, this exhibition may have been his last.’]

Gren Nilsview full entry
Reference: Stephen Scheding’s comments on Gren’s 1919 self portrait in the Art Gallery of NSW: While the artist has signed this work ‘Niel A Gren’ he was born Nils Ahgren (in Sweden in 1893). Later in America he was known as Nils Gren . (The Artist’s working names authority list, published by the National Gallery of Australia in 1990, gives both ‘Niel Gren’ and ‘Nils A. Gren’ as the correct name). He had left Sweden in 1912 at the age of nineteen. In 1916, at the age of 23, he was in Sydney, studying with Dattilo-Rubbo and then working alongside Roland Wakelin (and other artists such as Lloyd Rees, Percy Leason and Albert Collins) at the commercial art firm of Smith and Julius, run by Sydney Ure Smith and his friend the artist Harry Julius. It is not known where Gren was or what he was doing between 1912 and 1916.

Jean Campbell in Early Sydney Moderns records a story told by Wakelin that in 1916 Gren had returned in an excited state from a visit to the Royal Art Society Students Exhibition to meet Wakelin outside the Smith and Julius offices in Bond Street where he exclaimed to Wakelin: ‘Some mad man has bought your picture – Yon Yung [John Young, the art dealer]’. Wakelin used the adjective ‘harem-scarum’ to describe Gren’s personality.

It has been suggested that Gren was making what was intended to be a short stop in Australia but ‘the advent of World War I made it necessary for him to remain in Sydney’. This suggests it was possible that he may have been here around 1914. However, no references have been found of his presence in Australia prior to 1916.

Given that Gren went to America in 1919 it would seem that the self portrait in this collection, painted in February of that year, is a farewell gift to his friend Wakelin. At the time Wakelin and Roy de Maistre would have been preparing for their seminal ‘Colour in Art’ exhibition. It is tantalising to wonder whether the painting Gren has been working on in the self portrait (the one on the easel which is turned away from the viewer) relates to this brilliant body of work. A painting on the wall behind Gren, while not high-keyed, has a high horizon line typical of the Berry’s Bay landscapes exhibited by de Maistre and Wakelin in their 1919 exhibition.

At the very least this self portrait, which shows the artist Gren in a workmanlike, more than a romantic pose, is enough to demonstrate his brief involvement with the Modern movement in Sydney. Only four or five Australian works by him are known to exist today.


State of the Artsview full entry
Reference: State of the Arts (journal) - Mar./July 1996-Apr. to July 1998 [to be indexed]
Publishing details: East Sydney, N.S.W. : State of the Art Publications, 1996-1998 
3 v. : ill. ; 36 cm. State of the Art Publications, PO Box 243, Kings Cross, NSW 2011 
Ref: 1000
Millington Johnview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Havekes Gerardview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Teyssier Claudeview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Rushforth Peterview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Fay Evaview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Burgess Ruthview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Green Janetview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 6, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Dinosaur Designsview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Luna Park artview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations. Luna Park art.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Prest Cedar glass artistview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Gill Michael sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Jenyns Lorraineview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Rudyard Carolview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Australian glassview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Haye Myraview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Relke Joanview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Merten Carl p71view full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 5, 1993. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Wynne Prize historyview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Zusters Reinisview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Kleinboonscate Robertview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Stankov Sondiview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Chapmam Yvonne textilesview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Bull Normaview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations. An Artist in Two Hemisphetes
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Langshaw Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 13, 1996. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Hjorth Noelaview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Scheinberg Gisella galleristview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Pajak Yurekview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Baldwin Helenview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Carter Andrew designerview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Cerins Yurisview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 10, 1994. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
McIntyre Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 3, 1992. Article and illustrations. Arthur McIntyre in America.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Noai Yoshinobu woodcarverview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 3, 1992. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Wedge Harryview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 3, 1992. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Devlin Stuart jewellerview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Devlin Stuart jeweller designerview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
McIntyre Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Lowenstein Tom view full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations. And Lucio’s Restaurant.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Lucio’s Restaurant view full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations. And Tom Lowenstein.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Hunter Ingaview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 1, 1991. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Olley Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 12, 1995. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Lewers Darani and Helge Larsonview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 12, 1995. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Larson Helge and Lewers Darani view full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 12, 1995. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Zofrea Salvatoreview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 12, 1995. Article and illustrations.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Oz Arts. Issue 12, 1995. Article and illustrations. Article by Barry Pearce.
Publishing details: Wentworth Falls [N.S.W.] : Oz Arts Magazine, 1991-1996 
v. : col. ill. ; 30 cm.
Desbrowe-Annear Hview full entry
Reference: and see Annear Desbrowe
Desbrowe-Annear Harold view full entry
Reference: and see Desbrowe-Annear H. The first Archibald Prize 1921 awarded to W.B. McInnes’s portrait of artist Desbrowe Annear.
McCahon Colinview full entry
Reference: Colin McCahon - 15 Drawings
December ‘51 to May ‘52. with 15 lithograhic illustrations and titles.
Publishing details: Dunedin Hocken Library 1976. 24 l., 275mm [covers] with original mustard and black paper covers
Ref: 1000
Wollaston Toss NZview full entry
Reference: Jill Trevelyan - Toss Woollaston. A Life in Letters.
Publishing details: Te Papa Press [NZ]
2004. 520p, illustrated, 240mm, DJ
Ref: 1000
Lingwood-Smith William Thomas 1860-1933view full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: William Thomas Lingwood Smith was a Detective Photographer in the South Australian Police Force from 1888 until his retirement in 1922. As early as 1894 he also pioneered fingerprinting in Australia, becoming an expert in the Criminal Investigation Branch of the South Australian Police Department. The quality of his little-known, non-commercial photographic portraits of indigenous people rivals that of the much more famous portraits of another South Australian police photographer, Paul Foelsche.
Eleven photographs on early printing out paper, each approximately 145 x 100 mm, unmounted; head and torso portraits of identified Aboriginal subjects (versos with photographer’s pencilled captions and contemporary manuscript in ink ‘South Australian Aboriginal. Photo – W.T. Lingwood Smith, Detective Photographer, Adelaide’); all of the prints are in fine condition.
It is unlikely that Lingwood Smith ever met his older contemporary, fellow South Australian police photographer Paul Foelsche (1831-1914), whose photographic portraits of indigenous subjects taken in and around Palmerston (Darwin) between the 1870s and 1890s include many of the most visually compelling taken by any nineteenth century photographer working in Australia (see Jones, Philip. The policeman’s eye : the frontier photography of Paul Foelsche. Adelaide : South Australian Museum, 2005). It is almost certain, though, that Lingwood Smith would have come across Foelsche’s portraits in the South Australian police files. An album of photographs in the South Australian Museum (Series AA 295/01, Album P), whose provenance is given as ‘William Thomas Lingwood Smith’, bears out this theory, as it contains numerous photographs by both Foelsche and Lingwood Smith (including other copies of most of the photographs we offer here), along with others by F.J. Gillen, Saul Solomon, Henry Yorke Lyell Brown and Hermann Klaatsch, and would appear to have been compiled by Lingwood Smith himself. Whether the influence of Foelsche on Lingwood Smith is real or imagined, the similarities between the intense, beautifully lit portraits taken by both of these supremely gifted police photographers are immediately striking. Unlike those of Foelsche, however, the photographs of Lingwood Smith are virtually unknown; they were taken not for commercial purposes, but exclusively in the line of his police work; by contrast, a substantial part of Foelsche’s legacy comprises his topographical photography documenting the frontier township of Palmerston and the landscape of the Top End. With the exception of the album and some individual prints in the South Australian Museum, we can locate no examples of Lingwood Smith’s photography in any Australian collection.
The portraits in this archive of Lingwood Smith photographs were taken in various locations in South and Central Australia. The photographer’s captions identify the subjects by either their indigenous name or its anglicised version (sometimes both), as well as giving a location. They are as follows:
[1] Rebecca Blackmore / Murray River
[2] Ada Walker / Niledalli / Murray River
[3] Mary Beck / Kunda / Murray River
[4] Tommy Walker / Pollpalingada [Murray River]
[5] Emma Pritchard / Warrette / Last of the Gawler Tribe
[6] Dick Salter / Moona / Port Germain Tribe
[7] Koonea / Alice Springs
[8] Wannamucho. Innimincka (sic), North Australia
[9] Wannamucho. Innimincka (sic), North Australia
[10] Chapincharra / Palmer Creek
[11] Wanjirckara or Wonjirckara / Alice Springs
Lingwood Smith was listed as a police photographer under the name of ‘Smith, W.T. Lingwood’ at 140 Grote Street, Adelaide, in directories from 1891 to 1896; then as ‘Lingwood-Smith, W.T.’ at the following addresses: 1897–1903 140 Grote Street, Adelaide; 1904–12 Goodwood Road, Wayville; 1913+ Frederick Street, Parkside.’ (Noye, Dictionary of South Australian Photography, 1845-1914). This information suggests that the photographs we offer here were taken after 1897, as the photographer’s name on the versos is written in its later form.

Frith Frederick photographer ivorytypesview full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: This masterful portrait of the beautiful Laura Lilias Scratchley, sister of Thomas Alexander Browne (the author ‘Rolf Boldrewood’), was created when she was 19 years and 4 months old, soon after her marriage to Lieutenant-Colonel Scratchley of the Victorian Artillery (later Sir Peter Scratchley, colonial administrator). It is an extremely rare Australian example – the earliest known – of a photographic process that demanded over-painting by an artist of the highest calibre, in order to achieve the effect of a delicate portrait on ivory. 
[Melbourne : possibly Frederick Frith], January 17 1863. American ivorytype, full plate size, 215 x 170 mm, overpainted salt-print and backing paper between two sheets of glass (still sealed, perfectly preserved); original papered backing board (now separated) with contemporary inscription ‘Lily / Jan. 17. 1863. 19 4/12’ and later identifying caption by a descendant of the sitter; original gold-painted moulded plaster and wood frame (separated).
Laura Lilias Brown (1843-1917) was the youngest daughter of Sylvester and Elizabeth Brown, and was born on her father’s property, Hartlands, at Heidelberg, near Melbourne, in 1843. Her older brother was Thomas Alexander Brown (later Browne), who was to write Robbery under arms under the pseudonym Rolf Boldrewood. ‘Lily’ married Peter Scratchley (1835-1885), military engineer, at St. John’s Church, Heidelberg, on 13 November 1862. Scratchley had arrived in Melbourne from England in 1860, with the rank of Captain. He was responsible for making recommendations concerning the improvement of defences in Melbourne and Geelong, and was quickly placed in command of the newly-formed colonial unit, the Victorian Artillery, with the honorary rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. The portrait of Lily was made in Melbourne on January 17 1863, and her gold wedding ring is deliberately shown by the artist. Scratchley sailed for England with his young Australian bride at the end of 1863. However, the couple would return to Australia in 1878, when Scratchley became Commissioner of Defences for all of the Australasian colonies. Lily became Lady Laura Lilias Scratchley when her husband received his knighthood in June 1885, just prior to his untimely death while serving as Commissioner for the Protectorate of New Guinea.
During the 1850s and 1860s, in Europe, North America and also Australia, there was a vogue for overpainted photographic portraits which led to a bewildering number of processes and patents. The many processes that involved the overpainting of a paper print made from a wet collodion negative often had their own variant techniques, and one term could, rather confusingly, describe quite distinct processes. This is the case with the ivorytype. Originally patented by the English photographer Mayall in 1855 to describe his process of overpainting a positive image on natural or imitation ivory, the term was also used later in the same year by the American photographer Wenderoth in his patented ‘American ivorytype’. In this process, a paper salt-print is affixed to a glass sheet and overpainted using dense colouring. Another glass sheet is then coated with melted wax and the painted salt-print is pressed onto and smoothed against its clear waxed surface. When held to the light the resultant image is translucent. A variant technique involves the use of a second sheet of light-coloured backing paper (as in the present example), or a second, uncoloured, paper print, to create a luminous, three-dimensional effect.
The earliest Australian advertisement mentioning ivorytypes we can locate is from April 1863 (E. de Balk at Turner’s Portrait Gallery in Geelong). In November 1863 Thomas Glaister in Sydney advertised ‘IVORYTYPES. Those beautiful pictures, which, for softness of colouring and brilliancy of detail have been hitherto unequalled, are now being produced, for the first time in Australia, at this favourite gallery.’ The portrait of Lily pre-dates these advertisements by a clear margin. However, the ivorytype process was already familiar to some Melbourne photographers. In mid 1862, when the entrepreneurial American photographer Charles Wilson attempted to obtain a patent in Victoria for the sennotype, a process he falsely claimed to have “invented”, he was successfully challenged by Batchelder & O’Neill, William Perry and Frederick Frith, on the grounds that the sennotype was merely another name for ivorytype – ideed it was, the process being virtually identical to the American ivorytype. None of the charlatan Wilson’s sennotypes has been identified; but examples by Hobart photographer Alfred Bock, to whom, along with Townsend Duryea (Adelaide), he sold the “rights” to his process, are known. In Melbourne’s The Age, on 18 August 1862, a notice appeared advertising sennotypes by artist-photographer Frederick Frith. Frith had recently arrived in Melbourne from Hobart Town (where his brother Henry was also a professional photographer), and had worked briefly with Wilson before opening his own studio. He was highly skilled in the art of overpainting photographs, having used various techniques since 1855. Wilson publicly stated that Frith had ‘never obtained any of my chemical secrets, and the pictures which he and his brother [Henry] … palm off on the public are not true sennotypes, but base imitations’. Contrary to Wilson’s slur, Frederick Frith was unquestionably one of very few artists in Melbourne in January 1863 capable of producing this portrait of Lily. We can only speculate as to whether the artist would have referred to it as an ivorytype or sennotype.
There appear to be no other photographic portraits of Lily in public collections The portrait of ‘Lady Scratchley’ by Debenham of London held by the National Library of Australia (#PIC/7322) is incorrectly identified as ‘Laura Browne, sister of Rolf Boldrewood’. It is in fact a portrait of one of her two daughters, taken around 1890.

Washbourne Thomasview full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue, August 2017: The Windfall, [Title from caption on label]. [Victoria, Australia] : Thomas J. Washbourne, [circa 1870]. Albumen print photograph, 98 x 156 mm, laid down on its original card mount, verso with printed paper label ‘VICTORIAN VIEWS Photographed by T.J. Washbourne. Melbourne Depot : 89 Swanston Street’, bearing contemporary manuscript title of the work ‘The Windfall’; a second, later inscription reads ‘Presented by Mr. Thompson of Emerald Hill, Melbourne, Jan. 25 1878’; the albumen print is in superb condition, with rich tonal range and extraordinary clarity and detail for an outdoor image of this period.
Probably taken on a property in central Victoria, this exceptional photograph by Thomas Washbourne captures a group of men, women and children gathering firewood from beneath the gum trees at the edge of a cleared paddock. The fashion worn by the women in the photograph suggests a date of around 1870.
The travelling photographer Thomas Washbourne was prolific in his recording of life and scenery in rural Victoria, mainly to the southwest, west, northwest and north of Melbourne. In the late 1860s he produced a well known series of images of Victorian Aborigines as cartes de visite for commercial sale. He also used a stereoscopic camera and a number of his fine topographical stereoviews are known. ‘As well as taking views of large pastoral holdings and landscapes, Washbourne photographed the homes of more modest settlers in about 1870, such as Australian Farmyard at Porepunkah near Where the Buckland River Falls into the Ovens and Prospectors’ Hut, Upper Dargo, Gippsland‘ (DAAO).
We can locate no other copies of Washbourne’s The Windfall – a hitherto unknown gem of Australian colonial bucolic photography.

Diggles Sylvester (1817-1880)view full entry
Reference: Sylvester Diggles, The ornithology of Australia : being illustrations of 244 Australian birds, with descriptive letter-press. English-born naturalist, artist and musician Sylvester Diggles arrrived in Sydney at the end of 1853 and settled in Brisbane in January 1855. In 1859 he became one of the founders of the Queensland Philosophical Society, and in 1861 he established the Brisbane Philharmonic Society. Diggles’ principal interests in the natural sciences were ornithology and entomology, and his The ornithology of Australia was first issued in Brisbane as 126 plates in 21 parts, without text, between 1866 and 1870. It is not known how many sets were issued, but unquestionably the number was small. These plates covered about one third of the known bird population of Australia. However, due to lack of funds, Diggles had to discontinue the project. Between 1870 and 1875, bound versions were issued which included descriptive text, and also a title-page either in manuscript or basically printed. There are a few copies known to have a title-page ornately printed in colour, but these all seem to have some variation, as “Diggles evidently used this title-page for copies which he regarded as important” (Pigott, The Bird man of Brisbane, 2010, p.110). The work was reissued under a separate title in 1877.
Rare; only three complete sets recorded at auction in the past 70 years.
Ferguson 9146, 9147, 9148; Nissen IVB, 247
Provenance :
George Dawson Rowley (1822-1878), his bookplate to front pastedown and initialled note to title page
Dudley Dickison (1896-1967), sold at auction by Peter Arnold, 17 September 2007 (lot 12)
Private collection, Australia.
from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue:

Publishing details: [Brisbane : Printed for the author by T.P. Pugh, 1866-1870]. Folio,
Ref: 1000
Olday John (1905-1977)view full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: Outsider John Olday exhibits 40 paintings, 70 drawings at the Royal Admiral Hotel [Adelaide], 10th March – 21st March, 1964. A series of [36] photographic postcards, in uniform 140 x 87 mm format, printed on high quality Agfa-Gevaert matte stock, with reproductions of Olday’s works, all captioned and initialled by the artist in pen; the postcards are loose but accompanied by what are presumably their original grey paper “wrappers”, each 140 x 87 mm, printed in black Outsider John Olday exhibits 40 paintings, 70 drawings at the Royal Admiral Hotel, 10th March – 21st March, 1964; Olday has written his address in pen on the back of one of the wrappers, ‘c/o Ferguson’s Boat Shed, The Spit, Mosman, N.S.W.’; the postcards and wrappers are all in fine condition, with their original manila envelope; the series is possibly complete, although the number of the “edition” is not stated.
German-born political artist and anarchist John Olday, a member of the anti-Nazi underground during the war, arrived in Sydney in 1950. Although he staged many exhibitions of his own paintings, drawings and cartoons in both Sydney and Adelaide, he always refused to sell his work. An outsider in every sense of the word, Olday lived for years on a houseboat on Sydney’s Middle Harbour, before returning to Europe in the late sixties. The contribution of this intriguing and enigmatic character to the landscape of Australian art and politics in the fifties and sixties remains little researched. It is perhaps even the case that the existence of a number of the works reproduced in this group of Olday’s specially printed postcards was not previously known. See Joan Kerr’s biography of Olday on DAAO

Publishing details: [Adelaide? Sydney? : The artist, 1964].
Riemer Gustav Adolph 1842-1899view full entry
Reference: Tagebuchs-Auszug betreffend die Reise S.M.S. “Hertha” nach Ost-Asien und den Sudsee-Inseln, 1874-1877. [’A great photographic rarity, Gustav Riemer’s self-published album of original photographs from the voyage of the SMS Hertha to the Far East, the Pacific and Australia includes many important ethnographic images, among them a series of portraits of Aboriginal groups taken at King George Sound, Western Australia in 1877.
Teplitz : G. Riemer, 1878. Folio, original embossed cloth boards decorated and lettered in gilt (rubbed), spine with small loss at tail; brass clasp; silk lining papers; dedication leaf, title leaf, pp [8], [2], followed by [63] leaves with 343 mounted albumen print photographs in various formats ranging from 90 x 90 mm to 200 x 150 mm, all with printed numbers and captions; the leaves and photographs are in fine condition throughout.
Gustav Adolph Riemer (1842-1899) worked as paymaster on the Imperial German Navy corvette SMS Hertha on its 1874-77 voyage to the Far East, Australia and the Pacific. A self-taught photographer, Riemer took with him on the voyage a large-format wooden camera with a bellows extension and a Petzval lens, with which he created this extremely important visual record of the places visited. Among these were Madeira, Brazil, Singapore, Borneo, Sulu Islands, Philippines, China (Hong Kong, Canton, Amoy), Japan, Bonin, Micronesia (Marianas, Caroline Islands, Palau), East Siberia, Samoa, Tonga, New Zealand and Australia.
Riemer’s photographs include many significant ethnographical images, the most important of which are probably the six of Aboriginal groups taken at King George Sound (Albany) in Western Australia (nos. 326-331), together with the extensive series of Micronesian peoples (nos. 198-240) taken prior to the Carolines and Marianas coming under formal German colonial administration, and numerous exceptional views and portraits taken in Samoa and Tonga. Riemer also carried a stereoscopic camera, and although his stereoviews were separately published by Stiehm in Berlin, these images are also included in the album as ‘single’ views.
Only two examples of Riemer’s highly important album are held in Australian collections (National Library of Australia and State Library of New South Wales).
‘] from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue.
Ref: 1000
Dyson Will etchingview full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: Psyching the Sphinx … or The Secret Revealed. Etching, circa 1929 – 30, measuring 200 x 250 mm, signed lower right, captioned centre, framed.
A rare Dyson etching, of which we can locate only two other copies, in the National Gallery of Australia and the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, both with an alternate title ‘The sweating Sphinx, or The Secret Revealed” and additional caption “Our phycho analysts”.
Originally a notable Cartoonist, Dyson left Australia for London via New York in 1930 and exhibited a series of etchings at Fereargil Galleries in New York later that year. This etching was almost certainly created at the same time as his other satirical depictions of Freud and psychiatry, which were included in that exhibition and a subsequent show in London. In a sarcastic demonstration of the influence psychoanalysis was playing in Western society, Dyson jokes that the doctor’s probing could even get the mysterious Egyptian Sphinx to reveal its innermost secrets. The Sphinx’s body was excavated by Émile Baraize between 1925 and 1936, while Freud’s influence was at its peak, Dyson wittily lampooning the extent of his abilities.
 

OUTHWAITE Ida Rentoul (1888-1960) postcards
view full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: Four artist’s postcards from Elves and Fairies, series 79, by Ida Rentoul Outhwaite. “Elves and Fairies. Series no. 79”. Four (of 6) postcards, reproduced in colour from the original paintings by Ida Rentoul Outhwaite; each 139 x 88 mm; Anne Rides on a Nautilus Shell; What a Fright She Got!; The Farthest Ones Looked Like Great Butterflies; She Flew Through the Window, with Gumkin Behind.
Publishing details: London : A. & C. Black, [1921].
Nichols Georgeview full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August 2017 catalogue: View of Melbourne from the St. Kilda Road, Illustrated letter paper, sheet 257 x 205 mm (folded in half), first side with steel engraved image in black ink 90 x 170 mm (irregular), in the image lower left ‘George Nichols’ and lower right ‘Melbourne’; printed caption beneath image ‘View of Melbourne from the St. Kilda Road’; remaining 3 sides blank; pronounced vertical and horizontal fold lines, paper toned; the engraved image itself in good condition, affected only by the vertical fold.
The only other example of this engraving we can locate is held in the National Library of Australia (Rex Nan Kivell Collection, NK1686), although it is not identified as originating from an illustrated letter sheet.


Publishing details: Melbourne : George Nichols, [c.1870].
BAILY Henry Hall photographer
view full entry
Reference: Albumen print photograph with hand colouring, carte de visite format, 105 x 63 mm (mount), recto and verso of mount with imprint of ‘H.H. Baily, from the London School of Photography, Prize Medallist, Highest Awards for Album Portraits Melbourne Exhibition 1866-67. 94 Liverpool Street, Hobart Town / Tasmanian views from all parts of the Island’; both the albumen print and mount are in fine condition.’
Spence Percyview full entry
Reference: Britain’s Austral Empire. Portraits of the statesmen and officials concerned in the work of establishing the Commonwealth of Australia. The portraits from life, drawn by Percy F. S. Spence. The letterpress by G. Firth Scott.
Publishing details: London : Sampson Low, Marston and Company, 1901. Folio, gilt-decorated cloth portfolio containing one volume of letterpress text (pp. 54, one volume of engraved plates
Ref: 1000
Vassilieff Elizabeth
view full entry
Reference: ‘Elizabeth Vassilieff was born in Melbourne, daughter of Leslie Sutton, of Sutton's Music Warehouse. She was educated at the universities of Melbourne and Western Australia. At the age of about 30, she decided to buy the house ‘Stonygrad’ in Warrandyte which artist Danilla Vassilieff had built from stones and was putting up for sale. When Elizabeth coolly wrote out a cheque for £1200, more money than Danila had ever seen, he had apparently pursued her around the table and impulsively proposed: ‘You buy the house, you buy me.’ They were married in 1947 and lived at `Stonygrad'. Together, using more stones, they added extensions to the house.

Elizabeth began painting under Danila’s guidance. She signed her work ‘Vassilieva’ to distinguish it from her husband’s. In April 1949 she exhibited 20 paintings alongside Danila’s work at Tye’s Gallery in Melbourne. Of the few works that sold, most were Elizabeth’s. They exhibited together again in April 1950.

While Danila’s stylistic influence can be seen in Elizabeth’s work the fact that she was clearly far more political than her husband often sets it apart. In 1946, before they had met, she had published These Modern Writers (Georgian House, Melbourne). She was also an enthusiastic member of the Peace Movement and vocally opposed American ‘imperialism’ during the Korean War. She instigated gatherings at ‘Stonygrad’ which included leading leftist writers. Like Danila, she was a member of the Contemporary Art Society and she also contributed to and edited the CAS Broadsheet in the 1950s. She was associate editor of Meanjin in 1951. She travelled to the Soviet Union in 1952 and published Alternative to war: principles and policies of the Australian Peace Council in 1954 (Australian Peace Council, Melbourne). Later in life she supported Pat Mackie in the Mt Isa miners’ strike and wrote Mount Isa: The Story of a Dispute.

Elizabeth finally separated from Danila from 1956, following two years of marital strife. She continued to paint but did not gain the artistic profile of her husband. Nevertheless, her work is fresh and vivid and is often underpinned by political concerns that were ahead of their time.’ Stephen Scheding.

Call of the avant-gardeview full entry
Reference: Call of the avant-garde: constructivism and Australian art, by Sue Cramer, Lesley Harding. [’For more than one hundred years, artists have drawn inspiration from the early twentieth-century avant-garde movement Constructivism. Its abstract forms, utopian ideals and vision of art’s vital role in constructing a new society have continued to act as a beacon for artists of successive generations in many countries. This extensive survey of over seventy artists explores how Australian artists have responded to this ground breaking modernist movement and its enduring call upon their imaginations from the 1930s to the present day. A remarkable artistic experiment arising out of the social and political ferment of the Russian Revolution of 1917 Constructivism challenged the idea of the work of art as a unique commodity, explored more collective ways of working, and sought to integrate art into everyday life. Its newly invented language of abstract forms was first seen as early as 1913 in the works of Vladimir Tatlin, Alexander Rodchenko, and Varvara Stepanova among others, and in the paintings of Kasimir Malevich who founded the distinct but closely related movement of Suprematism. The influence of these movements spread to Europe and Britain becoming more broadly known as International Constructivism, and even further afield to Australia, generating local variations in each place.
Starting from the early influence of British constructivism on Australian painters and sculptors of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, the exhibition traces a growing awareness of Russian Constructivism among artists of later generations through to contemporary times. In keeping with the Constructivist impetus towards an integration of ideas across all the art forms, the display will include painting and sculpture, video and photography, the graphic arts as well as theatre and costume design by visual artists.
Works by Australian artists Ralph Balson, Frank Hinder, Inge King, Gunter Christmann, George Johnson, Robert Owen, Rose Nolan, Justene Williams and Zoë Croggon, among many others will be shown alongside those by key proponents of the original movement, such as Russian artists Rodchenko, Malevich, El Lissitzky and Alexandra Exter from Russia, and British artists Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth.’]


Publishing details: Bulleen, Vic. Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2017. hc, 162pp
Raised by Wolvesview full entry
Reference: Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition 1500, pb
Allan Micky 1944-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Cherinet Loulou 1970-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Collins Phil 1970-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Fast Omer 1972-

view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Goldberg Jim 1953-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Homma Takashi 1962-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Kozic Maria 1957-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Moffatt Tracey 1960-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Perceval John 1923-2000
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Piccinini Patricia 1965-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Rosetzky David 1970-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Sylvester Darren 1974-
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Williams Fred 1927-1982
view full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Ah Kee Vernonview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Burchill Janetview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
McCaley Jenniferview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Hawkes Ponchview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Hubbard Theresaview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Birchler Alexanderview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Jones Dianneview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Maddison Ruthview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Maynard Rickyview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Hein-Kuhn Ohview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Rainey Robertview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Thompson Christian Bumbarraview full entry
Reference: see Raised by Wolves, Art Gallery of Western Australia Exhibition. Curators: Robert Cook, Jenepher Duncan, Clotilde Bullen, Melissa Harpley. Includes an essay on each of the artists in the exhibition. Extensive biographies on each artist.

[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
[’RAISED BY WOLVES
10 February 2007 - 17 June 2007
Special Exhibitions Gallery
Raised by Wolves was the Art Gallery of Western Australia's creative response to the theme of the 2007 UWA Perth International Arts Festival, the Human Family.
 
The exhibition explored various alternative/non-traditional family structures as well as the emotional and social consequences of the nuclear family itself. Participating artists explored notions associated with alternative models of being and relating and charted the enticing possibilities and frightening realities of living outside mainstream society.

This challenging and complex exhibition brought together historical, contemporary and Indigenous works on paper, sculpture, paintings, film and installation.

Raised by Wolves' engaging and stimulating environment provided parents with a unique opportunity to discuss and examine the Human Family with their children, as well as confront the roles and expectations these children face in today’s world.’]
Publishing details: AGWA, 2007, edition of 1500, pb, 96pp
Australian artists and Cezanneview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Frater Williamview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Passmore Johnview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Classic Cezanne by Terence Maloon ... [et al.] ; edited by Angela Gundert. Includes essay ‘Seeing Cezanne - Australian Affinities’ by Ursula Prunster. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Art Gallery of New South Wales 28th November 1998 - 28th February 1999.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of NSW, 1998, pb. 186 pp.
Hinder Frankview full entry
Reference: Lewis Carroll & Frank Hinder: "The Hunting of the Snark"


Publishing details: published by Carrol Foundation, Victoria, 1989
first edition (hardcover)
Ref: 1000
Hart Proview full entry
Reference: Leslie Horsphol: "Beyond the Never Never: illustrated by Pro Hart"

Publishing details: first edition (hardcover)
published by View Productions Pty Ltd, 1983
Ref: 1000
Cavaliere Katthyview full entry
Reference: Katthy Cavaliere by Daniel Mudie Cunningham. "This publication accompanies the exhibition Katthy Cavaliere: Loved Museum of Old and New Art 28 November 2015 - 28 March 2016".


‘The exhibition, entitled Katthy Cavaliere: Loved, was curated by her friend Daniel Mudie Cunningham (an artist, writer and head curator at Artbank) over three years. The pair met while she was studying at the College of Fine Arts (COFA) in Sydney and  later while he worked at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery.

Cavaliere went on to stage exhibitions at regional NSW galleries and Sydney's Artspace, won the Helen Lempriere Travelling Art Scholarship in 2000 and in 2011 was selected to show her work Loved, 2008 in the Italian Institute of Culture at the Venice Biennale, which she regarded as the high point of her career.
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Born in Sarteano, Tuscany in 1972, Cavaliere emigrated to Australia with her parents when she was four.’
Publishing details: Sydney, NSW : brown paper in assocaition with Museum of Old and New Art, [2016] 
©2016 
199 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour), portraits (chiefly colour) ; 31 cm in box 32 cm 
(hardback)
Ref: 1000
van Heeren Judithview full entry
Reference: Sea Garden, exhibition invite with brief essay
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2017, double-sided card
Ref: 223
Sweaney Robynview full entry
Reference: The Summer that Was, exhibition invite with brief essay
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2017, double-sided card
Ref: 223
Smith Julianview full entry
Reference: 50 Masterpieces of Photography by Dr Julian Smith. A large portfolio 45 x 36 cm holding 50 lithographs and a booklet on the photographer, who died in Melbourne, by Russell Grimwade.
Publishing details: McLaren & Company, Fitzroy 1948.
Ref: 1000
Balfour Tom photographerview full entry
Reference: Tom Balfour was a photographer at Max Dupain & Associates from 1984-1990. He was born in Adelaide, South Australia and studied architecture and law there. He contributed photography to Sydney based Constructional Review magazine and in 1983 headed for Sydney to do work there. CR editor, Diane Kell introduced him to Max Dupain and he began as an architectural photographer with Dupain, notably photographing Jackson Oilfields for CSR. Tom has photographs collected by The Art Gallery of NSW and held a 2002 Exhibition at Pointlight, 'Tom Balfour, Asides from a working life'. From Pinterest website.
Bock Thomas and Alfredview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Bevan Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Bonney Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Bostock Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Brown Patrick Joseph Robinsonview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Brown William Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Browne Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Bussini Chiaraview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Burnell Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Clifton Williamview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Daintree Richardview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Crossland Johnview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Fauchery Antoine p108 & 112-3view full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Davidson Letitiaview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Duterrau Benjaminview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Dwyer J Jview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Gazard Jview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Forster Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Giglioli Enricoview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Grosse Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Hale Arch Matthewview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Haselden Hubertview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Hughes Karenview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Hyllested Peterview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Bentley Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Jevons Williamview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Kerr James Hunterview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Kilburn Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Kerry Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Knight Williamview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Lee Gary Muraview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Lee Shannonview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Lindt John Williamview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Marquis Danielview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Mason Patview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Maurice Richardview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Mitchell Ernestview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Nixon Bishop Francisview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Prout John Skinnerview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Reichenbach Edward (Ryko)view full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Robinson George Augustusview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
de Wesselow Simpkinsonview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Spencer Baldwinview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Steele Johnview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Taylor Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Walter Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Thomson Donaldview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Watson Johnview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
photographs of Aboriginesview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Westgarth Williamview full entry
Reference: see Calling the Shots: Aboriginal Photographies
edited by Jane Lydon. [’Historically, photographs of Indigenous Australians were produced in unequal and exploitative circumstances. Today, however, such images represent a rich cultural heritage for descendants, who see them in distinctive and positive ways. Calling the shots brings together researchers who are using this rich archive to explore Aboriginal history, to identify relatives, and to reclaim culture. It reverses the colonial gaze to focus on the interactions between photographer and Indigenous people — and the living meanings the photos have today. The result is a fresh perspective on Australia’s past, and on present-day Indigenous identities.
'The volume provides an unprecedented platform for Aboriginal Australians to voice their perspectives about photography and present their own research and/or photographic collections … as a reader/viewer, you cannot but marvel at the palpable connection between the photographer and the photographed.' -Marianne Riphagen, Oceania, vol. 85, issue 1, 2015’]
Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2014, 256pp. With index
Barringer Gwenview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Black Dorritview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Bloxam Ethelview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Bowen Stellaview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Buxton Jessamineview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Chapman Doraview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Davidson Bessieview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Fiveash Rosaview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Gee Annie Lauraview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Goodchild Doreenview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Grigg Mayview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Gwynne Marjorieview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Hambidge Aliceview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Hambidge Helenview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Hambidge Millicentview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Harris Mary Pview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Henty Rubyview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Heysen Noraview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Hick Jacquelineview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Kohlhagen Lisaview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Lowcay Roseview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
McNamara Leilaview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Pornett Murielview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Reynell Gladysview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Sauerbier Kathleenview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Tuck Marieview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Tuck Ruthview full entry
Reference: South Australian Women artists 1890s - 1940s by Jane Hylton. Includes essays and biographies.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. 1994. . 4to, 93pp. Colour and black and white illustrations. With bibliography.
Baines Thomasview full entry
Reference: see AntiquarianAuctions.com
August 31, 2017, 5:30 PM CAT
Constantia, Cape Town, South Africa, Lot 174: PHOTOCOPIES OF MANUSCRIPT ITEMS: Held in the Mitchell Library in Sydney. 3 volumes

Thomas Baines Journal January – March 1856. 318 leaves bound in blue cloth titled gilt on the upper cover and spine.

Thomas Baines Correspondence August 1855 – April 1857 about the conduct of the North Australian Expedition. 117 leaves bound in blue cloth titled gilt on the spine.

Thomas Baines Private Accounts 1856 -1857 North Australian Expedition 135 leaves bound in blue cloth titled gilt on the spine.

Included with these items : University of Cape Town. Department of History. Conference on Thomas Baines held in January 1997 Complete set of papers presented at the conference and opening address by Frank Bradlow bound in a ringback binder.

SA Painter John Thomas Baines was born on 27 November 1820 in King’s Lynn, Norfolk, England (often reffered to as Thomas Baines). His father was a master mariner and Baines was educated at Horatio Nelson’s Classical and Commercial Academy. In 1836 he began an apprenticeship with a coachbuilder. However, he soon rejected this profession in favour of painting, a craft he had learnt from the painter William Carr.

Baines left England for South Africa and arrived in Cape Town on 23 November 1842. He worked first as a painter for a cabinet-maker in Cape Town, and later as a marine and portrait painter. Baines based himself in the Eastern Cape between 1848 and 1853 and from there he undertook three journeys to the interior. His first journey was beyond the Orange River (1848), beyond the Kei River and over the Winterberg (1849) and an attempt to reach the Okavango Swamps (1850).

He became South Africa’s first official war artist and recorded the Eighth Frontier War (1850-1853). In 1852 Baines returned to England and published Scenery and Events in South Africa. In March 1855 he left England for Australia as official artist to A.C. Gregory’s north Australian expedition.

He was elected Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and received its gold medal in 1858. Later he was artist to David Livingstone's 1858 expedition to the Zambezi. Baines quarreled with Livingstone on this trip and he was unfairly dismissed for theft. He traveled to South West Africa (now Namibia) in 1862, and on 23 July of that year he reached Victoria Falls.

It was on this expedition that Baines painted many of his famous scenes which were reproduced in the album of prints, The Victoria Falls, Zambezi River was published by Day in London 1865.He went to Victoria Falls primarily to meet Livingstone and clear his name, but he arrived too late - Livingstone had already left the area.

A bout of fever forced him to return to Cape Town, and in 1864 he returned to England. He returned to South Africa in 1868 and led an adventurous expedition to the Matabele King Mzilikazi, on behalf of the South African Goldfields Exploration Company. Mzilikazi, however, died before Baines reached him. Baines’s Journal of residence in Africa spanning the period 1842-1853 was published in two volumes, in 1961 and 1964 respectively, for the Jan Van Riebeeck society. In 1873 he visited the Injembe district of Natal to investigate gold deposits and attended King Cetshwayo’s coronation. He was busy writing an account of his expeditions when he fell ill and died in Durban on 8 May 1875.http://www.sahistory.org.za/people/john-thomas-baines

Meredith Louise Anneview full entry
Reference: Louise Anne Meredith - Some of my bush friends in Tasmania.
Publishing details: London, Day & Son, 1860, First Edition,
Ref: 1000
Powell Moila 1895-1994view full entry
Reference: see Gildings Auction 15 August 2017, UK, lot 277: Moila Powell (1895-1994), watercolour and crayon, "South Australia Outback - Electric Cables from Adelaide to Darwin" 35cm x 47cm, two still life of roses in a vase, 26cm x 20cm, 29cm x 25cm, (3)
Hellier Dermontview full entry
Reference: see Charles Ross Fine Art Auction 19 August 2017, UK: lot 313, Dermont James Hellier (Australian, born 1916), St Albans Cathedral from Verulamium Park, oil on board, signed to lower left corner and dated '67, 48cm x 59cm, in a wooden frame. AND lot 315, Dermont James Hellier (Australian, born 1916), a street scene, possibly French Row, St Albans, circa 1967, oil on board, signed to lower right corner, 58cm x 48cm, in a gilt frame.
Bennett Portiaview full entry
Reference: from Holmes a Court Gallery website: Portia BENNETT 1898 - 1989
Posted September 15, 2010 in Artist Profile
Portia Bennett was born in Sydney on 28 January 1898. She attended classes under Dattilo Rubbo at the Royal Art Society of New South Wales 1913-14 and then won a scholarship to Julian Ashton’s Sydney Art School, where she studied at night between 1915-1919. During the day she attended the Blackfriars Teachers College, where she taught art from 1921-5. In 1925 she married William Wallace and moved to Queensland and then, in 1932, came to Perth. She helped found the Perth Society of Artists, working with Muriel Southern, Florence Hall and Margaret Johnson to establish a place for women artists in Western Australia. She was fascinated by the city and by modern recently constructed buildings, and painted many watercolour studies of the architecture around Perth. She observed her subjects carefully and with obvious affection, painting directly from the motif. She died in Perth on 1 May 1989, aged 91.
Reference:
GRAY, Anna, The way we were: 1940s - 1950s, p. 16, catalogue from an exhibition at the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 14 April 1996 - 30 March 1997.

Priest Margaretview full entry
Reference: Margaret Priest
Posted July 10, 2012 in Past Exhibitions 2009

03 Dec 2009 - 07 Feb 2010
Margaret Priest was one of the foremost figures in post-war art in Western Australia. Given Perth's cultural isolation from mainstream Australian art in the early 1960s, she was the first sculptor to introduce modernist ideas and became an important link to contemporary European practice at that time.
She played a prominent part in the aesthetic development of Perth during the decades between 1950 and 1980, a significant period for both artistic growth and cultural identity in WA. For over a decade she made an important contribution as a lecturer at WAIT (now Curtin) where she influenced many of the current generation of contemporary sculptors. She has always maintained contact with her national and international peers.
She created an important body of work, much of it in high profile public positions in the city of Perth. Her Pioneer Woman is the centrepiece of the public space in Kings Park. Despite her work being an integral part of the landscape in the City of Perth few people are now familiar with the wider framework of her career. Now in her mid-eighties, Margaret lives in the South West where she has continued to practise as a highly professional artist for many years.
The exhibition will include sculptures, associated drawings, and recent paintings. It will be accompanied by a new publication exploring the work of Margaret Priest in its historical context.
Publishing details: Holmes a Court Gallery, 2009
Ref: 1000
Duterrau Benjamin view full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article by Gareth Knapman ‘The Art of Conciliation’.
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Law Benjaminview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article by Gareth Knapman ‘The Art of Conciliation’.
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Shmith Atholview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article by Aimee Board ‘Progressive Pictures’
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Bennett William Trueview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article on photographic portraiture in Brisbane
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Mathewson Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article on photographic portraiture in Brisbane
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Lomer Albertview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article on photographic portraiture in Brisbane
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Driver Adaview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article on photographic portraiture in Brisbane
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Poulson Poul Cview full entry
Reference: see Portrait, Magazine of the National Portrait Gallery (Canberra). Article on photographic portraiture in Brisbane
Publishing details: number 57, Winter 2017
Meeson Doraview full entry
Reference: How Australia Led The Way: Dora Meeson Coates And British Suffrage, by Myra Scott. The history of Australia's contribution to the suffragists in Britian.
Publishing details: Commonwealth Office Of The Status of Women Canberra 2003, 63pp, b&w illustrations, staplebound softcover,
Coates Georgeview full entry
Reference: see How Australia Led The Way: Dora Meeson Coates And British Suffrage, by Myra Scott. The history of Australia's contribution to the suffragists in Britian.
Publishing details: Commonwealth Office Of The Status of Women Canberra 2003, 63pp, b&w illustrations, staplebound softcover,
McCubbin Charlesview full entry
Reference: WILD FOOD IN AUSTRALIA by CRIBB, A.B., and J.W. Paintings by Charles McCubbin.
Publishing details: Collins. 1975. (2nd imp) Or.bds. Dustjacket. 240pp. col & b/w ills.
Ref: 1000
Skonieczny Vitek view full entry
Reference: Exhibition of Vitek Skonieczny’s works, Portraits and Composition after Amadeo Modigliani and Pablo Picasso.at The Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Sydney.
The opening of the exhibition will take place on Friday 8 September 2017, at 6.30pm at the Consulate 10 Trelawney Street, Woollahra.
Publishing details: 2017
Karnta : Aboriginal women’s artview full entry
Reference: Karnta : Aboriginal women’s art
Publishing details: Darwin : Esplanade Gallery, [c.1990]. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp 27. Illustrated throughout with reproductions of works displayed.
Ref: 1000
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: In remembrance, Christmas, 1943 : Arthur Streeton’s Dandenongs. An anonymous eulogy for Streeton focusing on his ‘own beloved hills – his Dandenongs.’
Publishing details: [Melbourne] : Webb Printing, 1943. Duodecimo, printed green wrappers (spine faintly sunned), 8 pp.
Ref: 1000
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: Exhibition and auction sale of pictures by Arthur Streeton. Auction prospectus for a sale held by J.R. Lawson, Auctioneer, 196 Castlereagh Street.The prospectus includes discussion of the sale history of ‘Golden Summer’, the price escalation of Streeton’s works, and comment on the works by Norman Lindsay and Charles Conder also included in the sale.
 

Publishing details: Sydney : Farmer & Company, [1923]. Octavo, single folded sheet (4 pp),
Ref: 1000
Bonython Gallery Gazetteview full entry
Reference: Bonython Gallery Gazette. Complete set of 15 issues of the bimonthly magazine, February 1972 – May 1974. Each issue contains articles on Australian art and artists, with biographical information, mainly relating to exhibitions at the Bonython Gallery, Sydney.

[’Published by the owner of one of the most significant Australian commercial art galleries of the 1970s. This magazine provides illustrated biographies of the contemporary artists exhibiting at Bonython’s Paddington gallery after his move from Adelaide to Sydney.
Publishing details: [Sydney : The Bonython Gallery, February 1972 – May 1974. The 15 issues are in uniform format: small quarto, pictorial covers, 8 pp, illustrated.
Ref: 140
Lindsay Rubyview full entry
Reference: The cynic’s autograph book, and The cynic’s autograph book No. 2 : Illustrations by Ruby Lind. All published in the series. Each volume book of pithy phrases with space for supporters to sign their autograph. The first volume is illustrated by several artists while the second book is illustrated by Ruby Lind. Both books are clean and have not been used or inscribed. Scarce illustrated work by Ruby Lindsay. Three copies of The cynic’s autograph book No. 2 appear in Australian collections (State Library of Queensland; National Library of Australia; University of Adelaide) while The cynic’s autograph book does not appear to be held in Australian collections.
 

Publishing details: London : Gay & Hancock, 1913 (the first book in seventh edition). Two volumes, duodecimo, decorated boards (fine), pp. 96; 95, illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Painter & Sculptor Theview full entry
Reference: The Painter & Sculptor. A complete run of all twenty issues of this important and influential art journal, with the index, which critiques the modern art movement of the late 50s and 60s. The Australian expatriate painters Sidney Nolan, Francis Lymburner, Helen Ogilvie, Albert Tucker, Arthur Boyd and Charles Blackman are all featured, the latter two on the covers of separate issues. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: London : 1958 – 1963. Vol. 1, no. 1 – vol. 5, no. 4. Complete. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, each issue 32 pp., illustrated,


Ref: 1009
Davis Janview full entry
Reference: Ch’i - “Ch’i’ responds to a journey made to Guangzhou to study traditional Chinese landscape (fan) painting.
Publishing details: Lismore, N.S.W. : [self-published], 1996. Limited edition of 10 signed and numbered copies (this is copy no. 7). Small quarto (265 x 150 mm), black cloth boards with gilt design to upper board, [15] leaves with colour and monochrome illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Elenberg Joelview full entry
Reference: Chrysalis by Joel Elenberg and Shelton Lea [A rare literary edition, and the only de luxe art book created by Elenberg who died at the tragically young age of thirty-two.]
Publishing details: Melbourne: National Press, 1970. Folio, decorated wrappers, 8pp of poetry illustrated by Joel Elenberg. Only edition. Limited to 100 copies

Ref: 1000
Yilpinjiview full entry
Reference: Yilpinji - Illustrated exhibition monograph exploration the notion of Yilpinji, the ceremonies and arts of love as practiced by the Warlpiri and Kukatja people of the Central and Western Deserts of Australia.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Craftsman House, 2006. Square octavo, white boards with lettering in blind, pictorial wrappers, pp 86.
Ref: 1000
OPPEN, Monicaview full entry
Reference: Tree Song
[
Publishing details: Sydney] : Ant Press, 1991. Folding broadside with a designer binding of cloth bound boards with embossed design, 405 x 120 mm., letterpress with an original woodblock. Limited to 55 copies signed by the author-artist.
Ref: 1000
OPPEN, Monicaview full entry
Reference: OPPEN, Monica - Love Poem

Publishing details: [Sydney] : Ant Press, 1991. Folio, broadside bound in artist designed papered boards, measures 340 x 120 mm, letterpress with original woodblock. Limited to 35 copies signed by the author-artist.
Ref: 1000
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: Jeffrey Smart: The estate of the artist and select important paintings. Illustrated throughout in colour.
Publishing details: Brisbane : Fortitude Valley, 2016. Oblong quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp 56
Ref: 1009
Gurvich Rafaelview full entry
Reference: Rafael Gurvich. Nothing but blue skies.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Snapping Turtle Publications, 1988. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, dustjacket, pp. 104, illustrated
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: Arthur Boyd - Brides
Publishing details: Melbourne : Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2015. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp.80, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Maddock Beaview full entry
Reference: Bea Maddock : Prints 1960-1982
Publishing details: Wellington : National Art Gallery, 1982. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, [pp 24]. Illustrated with black and white reproductions.
Ref: 1009
Rogers Andrewview full entry
Reference: Andrew Rogers : A retrospective: Maquettes 1996-2015

Publishing details: Langwarrin, Victoria : McClelland Sculpture Park+Gallery, 2015. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp 144. Exhibition monograph, illustrated with colour photographs throughout.
Ref: 1000
Fieldhouse Janetview full entry
Reference: Janet Fieldhouse : body ornaments by FIELDHOUSE, Janet; BOSSE, Joanna. Catalogue for the Janet Fieldhouse : body ornaments exhibition held at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection Museum, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 27 January to 21 May 2017, curated by Joanna Bosse; includes an essay by Joanna Bosse on the art of Janet Fieldhouse; works illustrated include Marriage Pendant, Comb and Pendant 3, Mark and Memory 3, and Memory Series 2.


Publishing details: Charlottesville : Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, University of Virginia, [2017]. Small quarto, pictorial wrappers, [10] pp,  colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Rennie Reko view full entry
Reference: Reko Rennie : Patternation
Catalogue for the Reko Rennie : Patternation exhibition held at the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection Museum, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 28 January to 4 April 2011,
Publishing details: Charlottesville : Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, University of Virginia, [2011]. Folded sheet, 230 x 450 mm, comprising [6] pages each 230 x 150 mm, colour illustrations; fine.
Ref: 1000
Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Lister. You Call That A Back Rub
Publishing details: Melbourne : Metro Gallery, 2010. Octavo (16.5cm x 23.5cm), softcover, 20pp. As new condition. Full colour catalogue showing the Art of Anthony Lister with 24 plates and a short introduction by Ken McGrego
Ref: 1000
Brennan Angelaview full entry
Reference: Angela Brennan : New Paintings 2000

Publishing details: Melbourne : Niagara Galleries, 2000. Oblong quarto, pictorial wrappers, [pp 36]. All works exhibited reproduced with full page color plates.
Ref: 1000
Bennett Gordonview full entry
Reference: Gordon Bennett : Paintings 1981-1991
Features colour illustrations of selected works, and introduction by Michael O’Ferrall and essay by Rex Butler.
Publishing details: Epernay : Frances Barbier, Jean-Claude Prevost, [c. 1993]. Square octavo, lllustrated wrappers, text in English and French.
Ref: 1000
Hickey Daleview full entry
Reference: Dale Hickey : one hundred drawings
Publishing details: Powell Street Gallery, 1991. Quarto, silver wrappers, pp 32. Exhibition catalogue with twenty pages of colour plate reproductions of selected works; introduction by Chris McAuliffe.
Ref: 1000
King Grahameview full entry
Reference: Grahame King

Publishing details: Melbourne : Eastgate Gallery, 1996. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, [pp 12]. Exhibition catalogue showing 12 works, all illustrated in colour.
Ref: 1000
Jacks Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Jacks : Sketches of Spain
Illustrated in colour with introduction by Paul McGillick.
Publishing details: Perth : Lister Calder Gallery, 2001. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, trifold brochure.
Ref: 1000
Koller Christopherview full entry
Reference: Christopher Köller : Parádeisos
Art monograph showing 89 photographs, with inscription by artist on title page.
Publishing details: Melbourne : M.33, 2011. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp 89.
Ref: 1000
Smart Sallyview full entry
Reference: Sally Smart : Shadow Form
Exhibition catalogue illustrated with colour reproductions.
Publishing details: Bendigo : Bendigo Art Gallery, 2001. Quarto, black wrappers with pink metallic lettering, pp 54.
Ref: 1000
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: Howard Arkley : Casual Works
Working Drawings; Source Materials, Doodles 1974-1987.  Exhibition catalogue with balck and white reproductions of Arkley’s works, as well as essays by Richard Brown and Virginia Trioli.
Publishing details: Melbourne : 200 Gerturde Street, 1988. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, trifold card.
Ref: 1000
Piccinini Patriciaview full entry
Reference: Atmosphere / Autosphere / Biosphere : Works by Patricia Piccinini
Piccinini is well known for her contemporary visual art, utilising digital techniques and hyperrealistic materials. This monograph covers a range of her works, all illustrated in full colour.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Drome Pty Ltd, 2000. Octavo, pictorial wrappers, pp 48.
Ref: 1000
Cultivating the Artsview full entry
Reference: Cultivating the arts: Sydney women culturists 1900-50
Australasian Digital Theses
Author/Creator
Hunt, Jane Elizabeth
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Dept. of Modern History, 2001.
Bibliography: p. 447-465.
Introduction: sowing the seeds -- Mothers, writers, feminists and strangers: the early patronage of Miles Franklin, 1900-1906 -- From needlework to woodcarving: the Fairfax women and the Arts and Crafts Movement, 1899-1914 -- Ethel Kelly: the star of Sydney society -- 'Fellowing' women: Mary Gilmore and women writers of the 1920s -- Waging war on the establishment? Ethel Anderson, modern art and Sydney society, 1924-40 -- The musical ministry of Lilian Frost, Pitt Street Congregational Church organist, 1895-1949 -- From charity to cultural patronage: Lady Gordon and The Little Theatre movement, 1929-1939 -- The Sydney Symphony Orchestra and the 'Three musketeers' -- Waging war on the establishment? II: Mary Alice Evatt, modern art and The National Art Gallery of New South Wales -- Conclusion.
Description
In Australian cultural studies a focus on radical nationalists, male intellectuals, class-based cultural constructions and popular culture has steered the general historiography away from the subject of women and culture. Feminist cultural histories in Australia have tended to focus on practitioners, particularly women writers, and have set out to recover lost or unknown cultural heroines, develop exclusionist theories, or argue for a feminine aesthetic. This thesis considers the actions of both female practitioners and supporters of the arts, and suggests that despite numerous intersecting interests some continuity may be discerned in the actions of women culturists in Sydney in the first half of the twentieth century. Two key factors united them: the application of learned feminine behaviours in the patronage of culturally oriented individuals and movements, and an acceptance of the sort of distinctions that nineteenth century British discussions on culture had generated. -- This thesis examines through a series of case studies the work of practitioners in the arts, individual patrons or supporters of particular artists or cultural groups, and networks of supporters. It explores the dynamics of respective movements initiated or driven by women within musical, artistic, literary and theatrical circles, and in the wider community of the culturally concerned. This wider circle, driven by the mid-Victorian ideal of cultural custodianship, was concerned with the pursuit of cultural excellence and the 'civilising' arts. It was anxious about mass culture and the threat of mediocrity. Culturists, both men and women, sought to provide opportunities for training, education and cultural exposure; to found mutually supportive collectives; to establish permanent institutions; to secure the future of high culture in Sydney. In examining the movement towards the institutionalisation of cultural distinctions, this thesis takes a look at conservative Anglo-Australian cultural forces, as well as patriotic movements, and international modernist influences. Cultural nationalism thus appears as an ever evolving and multi-faceted creature, responding in a variety of ways to the onset of modernity. -- Threading these case studies together is a sense of femininity, and a raised focus on female cultural agency that was fuelled by the women's movement of the late nineteenth century. This is essentially about the cultural side of maternal citizenship. Sydney women culturists felt a duty to foster aspects of the high cultural life of the city. Years of private training and some contact with professional circles had given women culturists an active appreciation of the arts. In attempting to provide similar opportunities to the people of Sydney and the entire state, they achieved cultural agency. They used, as subtle acts of patronage, behaviours inherent in anachronistic codes of womanliness cited throughout the western world during the nineteenth century as the guarantor of the women's movement. They nurtured, they used social networks, and they frequently used charity-work as a working model. -- Female cultural activism accompanied an ongoing cultural reaction to modernity. It thus also changed as responses to modernity shifted in their focus. An increasing tendency in Australia to call on state and federal governments for cultural aid accompanied other shifts in the political and international environment following the Second World War. Thus the heyday of the woman culturist was over by the mid-twentieth century. Their actions, however, left a lasting legacy.
Description
Publishing details: Publisher : Macquarie University
Date: 2001
Ref: 1000
Anderson Ethelview full entry
Reference: see Cultivating the arts: Sydney women culturists 1900-50
Australasian Digital Theses
Author/Creator
Hunt, Jane Elizabeth
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Dept. of Modern History, 2001.
Bibliography: p. 447-465.
Introduction: sowing the seeds -- Mothers, writers, feminists and strangers: the early patronage of Miles Franklin, 1900-1906 -- From needlework to woodcarving: the Fairfax women and the Arts and Crafts Movement, 1899-1914 -- Ethel Kelly: the star of Sydney society -- 'Fellowing' women: Mary Gilmore and women writers of the 1920s -- Waging war on the establishment? Ethel Anderson, modern art and Sydney society, 1924-40 -- The musical ministry of Lilian Frost, Pitt Street Congregational Church organist, 1895-1949 -- From charity to cultural patronage: Lady Gordon and The Little Theatre movement, 1929-1939 -- The Sydney Symphony Orchestra and the 'Three musketeers' -- Waging war on the establishment? II: Mary Alice Evatt, modern art and The National Art Gallery of New South Wales -- Conclusion.
Description
In Australian cultural studies a focus on radical nationalists, male intellectuals, class-based cultural constructions and popular culture has steered the general historiography away from the subject of women and culture. Feminist cultural histories in Australia have tended to focus on practitioners, particularly women writers, and have set out to recover lost or unknown cultural heroines, develop exclusionist theories, or argue for a feminine aesthetic. This thesis considers the actions of both female practitioners and supporters of the arts, and suggests that despite numerous intersecting interests some continuity may be discerned in the actions of women culturists in Sydney in the first half of the twentieth century. Two key factors united them: the application of learned feminine behaviours in the patronage of culturally oriented individuals and movements, and an acceptance of the sort of distinctions that nineteenth century British discussions on culture had generated. -- This thesis examines through a series of case studies the work of practitioners in the arts, individual patrons or supporters of particular artists or cultural groups, and networks of supporters. It explores the dynamics of respective movements initiated or driven by women within musical, artistic, literary and theatrical circles, and in the wider community of the culturally concerned. This wider circle, driven by the mid-Victorian ideal of cultural custodianship, was concerned with the pursuit of cultural excellence and the 'civilising' arts. It was anxious about mass culture and the threat of mediocrity. Culturists, both men and women, sought to provide opportunities for training, education and cultural exposure; to found mutually supportive collectives; to establish permanent institutions; to secure the future of high culture in Sydney. In examining the movement towards the institutionalisation of cultural distinctions, this thesis takes a look at conservative Anglo-Australian cultural forces, as well as patriotic movements, and international modernist influences. Cultural nationalism thus appears as an ever evolving and multi-faceted creature, responding in a variety of ways to the onset of modernity. -- Threading these case studies together is a sense of femininity, and a raised focus on female cultural agency that was fuelled by the women's movement of the late nineteenth century. This is essentially about the cultural side of maternal citizenship. Sydney women culturists felt a duty to foster aspects of the high cultural life of the city. Years of private training and some contact with professional circles had given women culturists an active appreciation of the arts. In attempting to provide similar opportunities to the people of Sydney and the entire state, they achieved cultural agency. They used, as subtle acts of patronage, behaviours inherent in anachronistic codes of womanliness cited throughout the western world during the nineteenth century as the guarantor of the women's movement. They nurtured, they used social networks, and they frequently used charity-work as a working model. -- Female cultural activism accompanied an ongoing cultural reaction to modernity. It thus also changed as responses to modernity shifted in their focus. An increasing tendency in Australia to call on state and federal governments for cultural aid accompanied other shifts in the political and international environment following the Second World War. Thus the heyday of the woman culturist was over by the mid-twentieth century. Their actions, however, left a lasting legacy.
Description
Publishing details: Publisher : Macquarie University
Date: 2001
Evatt Mary Aliceview full entry
Reference: see Cultivating the arts: Sydney women culturists 1900-50
Australasian Digital Theses
Author/Creator
Hunt, Jane Elizabeth
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Dept. of Modern History, 2001.
Bibliography: p. 447-465.
Introduction: sowing the seeds -- Mothers, writers, feminists and strangers: the early patronage of Miles Franklin, 1900-1906 -- From needlework to woodcarving: the Fairfax women and the Arts and Crafts Movement, 1899-1914 -- Ethel Kelly: the star of Sydney society -- 'Fellowing' women: Mary Gilmore and women writers of the 1920s -- Waging war on the establishment? Ethel Anderson, modern art and Sydney society, 1924-40 -- The musical ministry of Lilian Frost, Pitt Street Congregational Church organist, 1895-1949 -- From charity to cultural patronage: Lady Gordon and The Little Theatre movement, 1929-1939 -- The Sydney Symphony Orchestra and the 'Three musketeers' -- Waging war on the establishment? II: Mary Alice Evatt, modern art and The National Art Gallery of New South Wales -- Conclusion.
Description
In Australian cultural studies a focus on radical nationalists, male intellectuals, class-based cultural constructions and popular culture has steered the general historiography away from the subject of women and culture. Feminist cultural histories in Australia have tended to focus on practitioners, particularly women writers, and have set out to recover lost or unknown cultural heroines, develop exclusionist theories, or argue for a feminine aesthetic. This thesis considers the actions of both female practitioners and supporters of the arts, and suggests that despite numerous intersecting interests some continuity may be discerned in the actions of women culturists in Sydney in the first half of the twentieth century. Two key factors united them: the application of learned feminine behaviours in the patronage of culturally oriented individuals and movements, and an acceptance of the sort of distinctions that nineteenth century British discussions on culture had generated. -- This thesis examines through a series of case studies the work of practitioners in the arts, individual patrons or supporters of particular artists or cultural groups, and networks of supporters. It explores the dynamics of respective movements initiated or driven by women within musical, artistic, literary and theatrical circles, and in the wider community of the culturally concerned. This wider circle, driven by the mid-Victorian ideal of cultural custodianship, was concerned with the pursuit of cultural excellence and the 'civilising' arts. It was anxious about mass culture and the threat of mediocrity. Culturists, both men and women, sought to provide opportunities for training, education and cultural exposure; to found mutually supportive collectives; to establish permanent institutions; to secure the future of high culture in Sydney. In examining the movement towards the institutionalisation of cultural distinctions, this thesis takes a look at conservative Anglo-Australian cultural forces, as well as patriotic movements, and international modernist influences. Cultural nationalism thus appears as an ever evolving and multi-faceted creature, responding in a variety of ways to the onset of modernity. -- Threading these case studies together is a sense of femininity, and a raised focus on female cultural agency that was fuelled by the women's movement of the late nineteenth century. This is essentially about the cultural side of maternal citizenship. Sydney women culturists felt a duty to foster aspects of the high cultural life of the city. Years of private training and some contact with professional circles had given women culturists an active appreciation of the arts. In attempting to provide similar opportunities to the people of Sydney and the entire state, they achieved cultural agency. They used, as subtle acts of patronage, behaviours inherent in anachronistic codes of womanliness cited throughout the western world during the nineteenth century as the guarantor of the women's movement. They nurtured, they used social networks, and they frequently used charity-work as a working model. -- Female cultural activism accompanied an ongoing cultural reaction to modernity. It thus also changed as responses to modernity shifted in their focus. An increasing tendency in Australia to call on state and federal governments for cultural aid accompanied other shifts in the political and international environment following the Second World War. Thus the heyday of the woman culturist was over by the mid-twentieth century. Their actions, however, left a lasting legacy.
Description
Publishing details: Publisher : Macquarie University
Date: 2001
Klippel Robertview full entry
Reference: see SMH article by Linda Morris ‘Driven by Artistic Impulse’, 15 August, 2017, p12 full-page article on upcoming exhibition at Olsen Gallery with summary of Klippel’s life.
Publishing details: article inserted in Robert Klippel by Deborah Edwards
Griggs Davidview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald article 15 August, 2017 titkled ‘Welcome to Cowboy Country
Publishing details: inserted in The Buko Police by David Griggs
Walsh James convict artist in Western Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August 2017, Vol 39, no 3. Article ‘convict artist in Western Australia’ with 28 illustrations.
Pate Klytieview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August 2017, Vol 39, no 3. Article ‘The Beleura collection of Klytie Pate pottery’ with 23 illustrations. Pages 5-13,
Thwaites Robert Ferry colonial landscape artistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August 2017, Vol 39, no 3. Article ‘Robert Ferry Thwaites - colonial landscape artist’ with 19 illustrations.
Thwaites George & Sons cabinet makers
view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August 2017, Vol 39, no 3. Article ‘Robert Ferry Thwaites - colonial landscape artist’ with 19 illustrations. References to George Thwaites
Holst Arnoldview full entry
Reference: Ebay listing 15 August 2017: ‘Arnold Holst was a successful Australian tonalist painter, based in Melbourne. Having served in World War I in the AIF (Australian Wireless Squadron), he returned home and established himself as a skilled artist. He specialised mainly in still lifes, but also painted Australian landscapes. He was also associated with the tonalist movement, including artists such as Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett & Percy Leason. He held a popular solo exhibition at the Athenaeum Gallery in Melbourne in 1950, which was highlighted in 'The Age'.
 
“Roses” (1940)
oil on canvas on board
27 x 27cm (image), approx. 33 x 33cm (frame)
signed & dated '40 lower right
*exhibited at Victorian Arts Society Spring Exhibition, Sept. 1940
 
It was exhibited at the Victorian Arts Society Spring Exhibition in September 1940, and was given special mention in 'The Age' newspaper on 24 September 1940 ("Spring Art Show; V.A.S. Galleries" p.9).
Barany Eugeneview full entry
Reference: Research notes by Stephen Scheding: Barany had exhibited in a two-man exhibition at Sydney’s Macquarie Galleries in 1955. The other artist was John Olsen. The Sydney Morning Herald (February 16, 1955. P2) referred to them as ‘an ill-matched pair’. Le Courrier Australien (Sydney, 25 February, 1955, Page 8) also noted that here were ‘two most unlike artists side by side’. Then, not surprisingly given the French readership, reviewed Barany before mentioning Olsen: ‘[Barany has found happiness and satisfaction in full, clear colours, in literalness and in the rich field for satire to be explored in such places as the Académie Française and La Rue du Chat qui pêche… The Blue Express is a delightful primitive-style picture; Polichinelle gains strength by its simplicity.’ On the other hand the reviewer felt that there was ‘there is at times an almost melancholy feeling in [Olsen’s] pictures’ but hoped ‘for interesting development in the future’.

Other snippets of information include the fact that Barany worked as a set designer for the Sydney Ballet Group in the 1950s (mentioned in Australia Dances: Creating Australian Dance, 1945-1965, by
Alan Brissenden and Keith Glennon, p 89). The fact that one of Barany’s paintings that appeared at auction (Lawsons, 7 August 2009, lot 2094) was titled Back Stage Theatre Royal [Sydney], might also suggests that the artist may worked for a time as a designer in the theatre.

There is also a reference in the Australian Women’s Weekly (28 Mar 1973 Page 52) to Barany painting cherubs on the ceiling of a house in Middle Cove, Sydney, which was being redecorated by the owners ‘in colourful Spanish style’. Decorating may have been regular work for Barany or a favour for a friend.
Slade George Penkivil 1832-1896view full entry
Reference: see Joel’s Auction, The Decorative Arts Collection of James Fairfax AC, 01 Sep 2017, Lot 446: GEORGE PENKIVIL SLADE (1832-1896)
The Cottage, Paddington 1870
pencil and wash, heightened with white, on paper
titled, signed with initials and dated lower right: THE COTTAGE - PADDINGTON / 20th Aug 1870 / GPS
17.5 x 25cm

PROVENANCE:
Academy Arts Pty Ltd, Sydney (label verso)
Estimate $ 1,000-2,000
Lindsay Rubyview full entry
Reference: Epigrams of Eve by Sophie Irene Loeb illustrated by Ruby Lind.
Publishing details: Gay and Hancock, c1900, 81pp
Ref: 1000
Taylor A Jview full entry
Reference: A. J. Taylor - The Ground Beneath - 147 works listed. Biography.
Publishing details: Martin Brown Contemporary, 2017, pb, 24pp with price list and invite inserted.
Ref: 223
Ryan Sueview full entry
Reference: Sue Ryan - Precious, 10 exhibits all illustrated. Biographical information.
Publishing details: Martin Browne Gallery, 2017, with price list and invite.
Ref: 223
Woolley Kenview full entry
Reference: see SL, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Spring 2017 for four-page article on Ken Wolley’s drawings in the Library’s collection.
artists’ booksview full entry
Reference: see SL, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Spring 2017 for article on artists’ books in the Library’s collection.
Renniks Australian Artistsview full entry
Reference: Renniks Australian Artists by John Kroeger. A biographical index of Australian artists who are represented in Australian public collections.
Publishing details: Renniks & Co, Pty Ltd 1968, not paginated, hc, dw,
Stuart William Evans Duttonview full entry
Reference: see Joels auction, 5 September, lot 205:
Description: W.E.D. STUART (1826-1873)
Still Life With Fruit 1866
oil on canvas
signed and dated lower right: W. Stuart/ 1866
83 x 83cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
Arriving in Australia during the Gold Rush, Stuart ventured to to Sandhurst (Bendigo) but was not successful as a prospector, so instead turned his hand to become a painter of still lifes and marine scenes. Stuart had already exhibited at various London institutions and in Australia he showed with the Victorian Academy of Arts and at the 1866 Intercolonial Exhibition.
Horrell Charles Cornish (1822-1892) view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons Auction 3 September 2017, lot 301: HORRELL, Charles Cornish (1822-1892), Arthur's Seat fronting Port Phillip Bay, and about 15 miles from Schnapper Point and 50 miles (S) from Melbourne... from nature,' Dec 1870 or 1879 (date partially trimmed). C C Horrell was a draftsman in Surveyor Generals Department, & died in Prahran Victoria.
W/Clr
24.5x33cm
Wittenoom Charles Dirckview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hacket auction, 20 September 2017, lot 1: CHARLES DIRCK WITTENOOM
(1791 – 1843)
SKETCH OF THE TOWN OF PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, c.1836 – 37
watercolour and pencil on paper
22.5 x 34.5 cm
bears inscription on label verso: C. D. Wittenoom / A STREET SCENE IN PERTH / … / Drawn circa 1832. / …
ESTIMATE: 
$150,000 – 200,000
PROVENANCE
Captain Alfred Walter Frances Fuller, United Kingdom
Thence by descent
Mrs Estelle Fuller, United Kingdom
Sotheby’s, London, 30 January 1969, lot 93
Private collection
Christie’s, Melbourne, 3 May 1988, lot 99
Private collection, Perth
EXHIBITED
Various displays, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, February 1989 – 2017
Unknown Land: Mapping and Imagining Western Australia, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 17 September 2016 – 30 January 2017 (as ‘Sketch of St. George’s Terrace, Perth’)
LITERATURE
O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P., On We Go: The Wittenoom Way – The Legacy of a Colonial Chaplain, Fremantle Press, Western Australia, 2009, pp. 46 – 47 (illus.)
RELATED WORKS
Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia, engraving by Henshall, J., illus. in Ogle, N., The Colony of Western Australia: a manual for immigrants, James Fraser, London, 1839, opposite p. 30 and Murdoch, W., Westralia Gift Book: to aid Y.M.C.A. military work and Returned Nurses' fund: by writers and artists of Western Australia, V. K. Jones, Perth, 1916, p. 40
Rev. John B. Wittenoom, Front View of the Artist’s House, 1832, pen and wash, 21.9 x 31.2 cm, in the collection of Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth
CATALOGUE TEXT
St George’s Terrace is the main thoroughfare of Perth. Formerly cited as one of the most charming boulevards in Australia, it was utterly transformed by the mining booms of the 1960s and 1970s. After a kilometre of imposing skyscrapers, a section of colonial buildings still stands clustered around the Barrack Street precinct but these date predominantly from the years after convict labourers arrived in the 1850s. Going back even further to 1837, Charles Wittenoom stood some twenty metres back from that corner as he drew this historically important view of the young township, then known as the Swan River Colony. To the right is the entrance to what is now Barrack Street, so named for the army barracks which originally stood along the track that continues on the other side of the Terrace. In the foreground, where a mature Marri tree is depicted leaning over the road, was the residence of the artist’s brother Reverend John Burdett Wittenoom who had arrived in Perth in 1830 to take up the position as the colony’s Chaplain, a mere seven months after the Lieutenant-Governor, Captain Stirling, had arrived with the first settlers on the Parmelia.

As part of his contract, Reverend Wittenoom was given title to lot L1, ‘a narrow, deep allotment of about one acre on St George’s Terrace’,1 with Bazaar Street (now The Esplanade) as one of its boundaries. He soon bought the adjoining lot, which had a claypit. Leasing this to a brick maker in return for a tithe of 10,000 bricks, Wittenoom and his sons constructed a handsome two-storey house: ‘The bricks were made and burnt on the premises … The ‘tout ensemble’ looks exceedingly well and hath rather a genteel appearance than otherwise. It is much admired, being decidedly the most substantial and best built house in the colony’.2 He also planted a bountiful garden featuring a grove of thirteen peach trees. Wittenoom had formerly taught at Oxford University and augmented his theological duties in Perth by founding the colony’s first grammar school in 1838. He enthusiastically promoted the new colony in letters home, describing the climate as being ‘splendid and more congenial to health than any other on the face of the globe’;3 and became involved with the Children’s Friend Society, a charitable organisation based in London which found posts in the various British colonies for orphaned or abandoned children. It was this confluence of interests that led his brother Charles to travel to Perth, arriving in late December 1835.

CDC-10615246.JPG

CHARLES DIRK WITTENOOM
J. HENSHALL (ENGRAVER)
Sketch in the Town of Perth,
Western Australia, 1839
hand coloured engraving
10.1 x 16.8 cm
image courtesy of the
National Library of Australia, Canberra
Already known as a sketcher and newspaper man, Charles chartered a small ship (the Giraffe) from London and brought with him ten children on behalf of the Children’s Friend Society.4 Four weeks later, he took the Giraffe on to Sydney where he stayed for a few months before charting another vessel, the Isabella, for a trading journey to the Dutch East Indies. Detained for a while in Timor, the Isabella returned to Sydney then continued to Perth, arriving 23 November 1836.5 This time Charles stayed for four months and it is almost certain that he completed this drawing during that period. In the early days of the colony there had been much speculation, but also much disappointment, fuelled by ‘get-rich-quick’ settler schemes proposed in London, most of which were undermined by dismal reports from returning ships’ captains who had deposited their passengers at the then-desolate tent city of Fremantle, some miles from the actual township of Perth. If the ships had journeyed further upstream, they would have found a more attractive and well-sheltered location described by its now-displaced indigenous inhabitants as ‘Nyungar boodjar, Nyungar land … [a river landscape created by] the Waakal or Dreamtime Serpent … weaving its bulky body across the plain, curving down to a wide path in front of The City of Perth, the bloated belly of a well-fed python’.6 Recognising the true potential of the new colony, the Wittenooms sought to change the misinformation being disseminated in England.

Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia, c.1836 – 37 is one of only four known drawings executed by Charles Wittenoom whilst in the colony.7 Looking east down the Terrace, he depicted the principal buildings and made a feature of native trees which had been retained along the streetscape, augmented by flourishing introduced species. Riding toward the viewer in a stylish Stanhope gig is a figure identified by previous researchers as Reverend Wittenoom (in the absence of a visible clerical collar or scarf, it would seem this accreditation is based on the figure’s sober coat, tightly buttoned on a hot summer’s day). To the left, the hill gently inclines to the natural ridgeline that Hay Street now follows. The white-washed building shown is the original soldiers’ barracks (1829 – 30) with a roofed tent featuring striped canvas added as a side annexe. In front of this is the Officers’ Barracks built between in 1833, and further along, the Military Hospital (1831) bounded by Cathedral Avenue with the adjacent gaol (c.1829) at the corner of Pier Street. Opposite the Officers’ Barracks, visible between the trunk of the Marri tree and the edge of the drawing, is the small cottage, a ‘Palmer’s Hut’,8 which was Captain Stirling’s original home.9 Subsequently promoted to Governor and Commander-in-Chief, Stirling journeyed to London for a year in August 1832 and on his return10 found the original cottage too small for his needs, so took over the new Officers’ building for his family and as a Vice-Regal headquarters until a more appropriate Government House could be built.

The scene has all the warmth of a Perth summer and the bucolic air of pastoral commerce which would have communicated a clear and positive message to potential emigrants. Further evidence is the shadows, which are cast as if on a summer’s day in England, pointing to the north whereas in Perth, naturally, they face south. The message here is clear – Perth is presented as a genteel mirror of English society. Charles left the colony on 31 March 1837, a week after his brother opened ‘the new building erected to serve as both courthouse and church’. Still standing opposite the site of the Reverend’s own house, the Old Court House is central Perth’s only survivor from these foundation days.11 On arriving in London, Charles contacted Nathaniel Ogle, a Fellow of the Geological Society who had already published a range of books.12 It is almost certain that the two men knew of each other and may have even discussed Charles’ journey beforehand, as Ogle himself had been involved in an unsuccessful earlier proposal to found a colony south of Perth with ‘nearly 1000 well-selected companions to Leschenault and La Vasse’.13 Four of Wittenoom’s drawings were translated into engravings by J. Henshall and reproduced in Ogle’s highly influential The Colony of Western Australia: A manual for emigrants 1839, a richly detailed compendium which radically altered perceptions of the colony. In the engraved translation of Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia, however, Charles appears to have suggested one distinctive addition – an enhanced view of Captain Stirling’s original dwelling peeking through the lush foliage. In addition, the original image of the Reverend in his horse-drawn gig was replaced with a dray, and the various street characters were augmented with a group of four aboriginal figures in European clothing.

Of the four original drawings executed by Charles, two are in Australian collections – Sketch of the Town of Perth from Perth Water, Western Australia (The Janet Holmes à Court Collection, Perth); and View from the Court House Arthur's Head, Freemantle [sic] (State Library of New South Wales, Sydney). The third remains in private hands, whilst examples of the engravings are held by various institutions and private collectors. Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia was last offered for sale in 1988 when it achieved the then-record price of $93,500 for a Western Australian colonial drawing.14 There are other artist renditions of Perth and Fremantle from the 1830s but this particular work is unique with its aspect of St George’s Terrace as it appeared in its earliest inception 180 years ago.

1. O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P., On We Go: The Wittenoom way. The legacy of a colonial chaplain, Fremantle Press, Western Australia, 2009, p. 25
2. Wittenoom, J.B., letter to cousin William Jersey, 24 July 1832, quoted in O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P. op. cit., p. 26
3. ibid., p. 26
4. ‘Shipping Intelligence’, Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, Western Australia, 2 January 1836, p. 626
5. ‘Shipping Intelligence’, Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, Western Australia, 26 November 1836, p. 804
6. Collard, l. et al., ‘Oorl Ngulluck Koorliny (Come we walk together)’, in White, T.A. (ed.), Perth: a guide for the curious, UWA Publishing, Perth, 2016, p. 35
7. A fifth drawing, Front View of the Artist’s House, 1832 (Art Gallery of Western Australia), is attributed to Reverend Wittenoom but Charles is increasingly considered to be the most probable artist.
8. See Royal Perth Hospital Heritage Society website: http://rphheritagesociety.org.au/wordpress/wa-early-history/, accessed 13 July 2017
9. On the site of the contemporary Stirling Gardens, this building has been previously mis-identified by researchers as being Reverend Wittenoom’s house, but his was well out of this drawing’s frame, some thirty metres south of the mature Marri tree.
10. Stirling landed 19 August 1833, via the James Pattison.
11. Reverend Wittenoom’s house was demolished in 1890 and replaced by the Weld Club.
12. The Royal Geographical Society was founded in 1830 and the first paper read before the original members dealt with Western Australia.
13. Battye, J.S., Western Australia: A history of its discovery to the inauguration of the Commonwealth 1924 (facsimile edition), University of Western Australia Press, Perth, 1978, p. 78. The author thanks Janet Muir of Muir Old and Rare Books, Perth, for direction to this source.
14. Christie’s, Australian Paintings, Prints & Sculpture, Melbourne, 3 May 1988, lot 99

The author thanks Melissa Harpley and Eileen Jellis, Art Gallery of Western Australia, for assistance in cataloguing this work.

ANDREW GAYNOR

Rowe George 1796-1864view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hacket auction, 20 September 2017, lot 2: GEORGE ROWE
(1796 – 1864)
GEORGE ROWE AT THE DIGGINGS NEAR ARARAT, c.1858
watercolour and gouache on paper on cardboard
63.0 x 186.5 cm
signed lower right: GRowe
ESTIMATE: 
$250,000 – 350,000
PROVENANCE
The artist, Exeter, United Kingdom
Thence by descent
James Arthur Rowe, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA until his death in 21 October 1922
Thence by descent
George Fawcett Rowe, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA until his death in 9 February 1952
Thence by descent
Elizabeth Rowe Holmes, Florida, USA until her death in 17 August 2003
Thence by descent
Private collection, New Jersey, USA, great-great-granddaughter of the artist
EXHIBITED
International Exhibition [Department of the Colony of Victoria, Australia: Mining, Quarrying and Metallurgy Section], London, 1 May – 1 November 1862, cat. 476
George Rowe, Artist and Lithographer, 1796-1864, Art Gallery and Museum, Cheltenham, United Kingdom, 21 August – 2 October 1982; Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter, United Kingdom, 30 October – 11 December 1982 (reproduction exhibited, as ‘George Rowe on the Bendigo (?) Diggings’)
LITERATURE
Blake, S., George Rowe, Artist and Lithographer, 1796-1864, Art Gallery and Museum, Cheltenham, United Kingdom, 1982, cat. 165 (illus.)
RELATED WORKS
Six preliminary figure studies for George Rowe at the Diggings near Ararat, c.1858, artist’s Sketchbook, pencil on paper, 12.7 x 17.9 cm, 32 sheets, private collection
CATALOGUE TEXT
The Victorian goldfields of the early 1850s drew all kinds of characters and talents to them, including London lawyers and professional artists. George Rowe had been High Bailiff of Cheltenham, and, as a master lithographer, one of England’s most successful producers of picturesque and topographical views. Like many, he sought to regenerate his family’s fortunes through gold. And like most, he soon realised that there was more to be made by returning to an earlier vocation. From the Castlemaine diggings in December 1852 he moved on to Bendigo, setting up a refreshment tent with the aid of his son George Curtis (later Fawcett) Rowe. When the rush to the McIvor digging robbed them of customers, Rowe turned to art. His success was remarkable, having difficulty keeping up with the demand for ‘some token of recollection … to be sent to England or America’.1 There was also demand for signboards, painted inscriptions on wooden tombstones, and flags to distinguish the miners’ tents. Son George Fawcett turned to the theatre, painted scenery, and performed at Bendigo’s Crystal Palace. He eventually established himself in England and the U.S.A, ‘where he made his mark both as an actor and as a dramatic author’.2

George Rowe’s first watercolours of the Bendigo diggings were generally small in size, a typical one being Australian Settlers’ Tents, 1853 in the Nan Kivell Collection of the National Library of Australia, Canberra.3 A group of Aboriginal figures stand to the right and a dog sits guard outside one of the tents, characteristic additions found in many a later picture. At this time Rowe averaged two pictures a day, charging between one and five guineas each.4 In May of 1857, in the long room adjoining the Criterion Theatre, Sandhurst (the old name for Bendigo), he exhibited fifty of his watercolour views of Bendigo, Castlemaine and Forest Creek for an Art Union, also shown in Castlemaine and Melbourne. The Bendigo Advertiser reported with enthusiasm and at length: ‘In every instance the artist has succeeded admirably in a correct delineation of the scenes he has undertaken’.5 Works included views of Kangaroo Flat, Eaglehawk, ‘New-chum Gully’ and Sandhurst from Quarry Hill, 1857 (Bendigo Art Gallery). ‘Of all the pictures enumerated, which, with others, are all of well known localities in the Bendigo district, we feel it is impossible to speak in too high terms of praise’.5

Given to travel through the Colony, the following summer of 1858 Rowe made a sketching tour of the Western District of Victoria, its spectacular mountain scenery having attracted other artists of the stature of Eugène von Guérard and Nicholas Chevalier. The chief attraction was Mount William, the highest peak in the Grampians Ranges. Rowe recorded the visit in his diary, an extract from which was published by the Melbourne Age newspaper: ‘…the view of the Grampians and the Victorian Ranges repaid us for all our labour. I took a sketch…’.6 And again: ‘I sketched the scene and treasured up in my memory the glorious effects which I was privileged to witness, and hope someday to find time to depict them in another fashion’. While this passionate response and parallel details may suggest a connection with our watercolour and brilliant fulfilment of hope, the entries certainly illuminate Rowe’s interests and provide a fascinating insight into George Rowe at the Diggings near Ararat, c.1858.

Rowe felt passionately about Australia, its climate, landscape, native life and opportunities. He had intended to emigrate, bringing his family out after he had established himself. This enthusiasm for his intended new home spilled over into his earlier letters to his wife, Philippa: ‘… I now like the warm glow of the clear and brilliant sky. I have lived now long enough in the Colony to estimate the qualities of the climate and all that has been written on the subject is true…’.7 And again: ‘It is a new and enterprising country, one that presents under its abundant riches opportunities of accumulation of wealth, and open to the aspiring of ambition and genius…’.

The climbing party, which included Rowe’s young son Sanford, had set out for Mount William on the morning of 24 February 1858. While bad weather delayed the ascent, Rowe described the view with enthusiasm:

The scene from the summit of Mount William is as grand and picturesque as those to be viewed from any of the Alps of Europe. The setting sun lit up the massive basaltic rocks that shot up from the summit of the various mountains like columns of ruby – a gorgeous temple based the dark robe of misty forest gradually deepening with the blackest shadow, giving the appearance of unfathomable depth to the gorges of the mountain. The naked limbs of the great stringy bark trees so white and skeleton like – the solitude, the consciousness of being so far removed from the haunts of man – all tended to create a sensation of undefinable awe.7

Rowe’s sketchbook includes several figure studies for our watercolour – the young man aiming his rifle, the Aboriginal woman in front of her mia-mia, the dog, and himself busily sketching. On the way to Mount William, they had ‘Shot some beautiful parrots, commonly called the Blue Mountain’.8 In the watercolour, Sanford shoots at parrots. And the very horizon of craggy mountains, evident on the large sheet of drawing paper in the sketchbook, is similarly seen within the picture within the watercolour, further testimony to Rowe’s incredible attention to detail. The carrying tube nearby indicates that Rowe took these large sheets with him – presumably completing the sketch on the spot and later working it into the finely finished watercolour we see today. Moreover, the image of the artist at work within his own picture is a familiar touch in nineteenth century art; even Charles Conder introduced himself working at his easel in All On a Summer’s Day, 1888 (Art Gallery of South Australia, M.J.M. Carter Collection). Importantly, the artist’s presence gives an increased sense of authenticity, certifying his record of the scene. And a further interesting connection between written and drawn detail is mention of the ‘flat rock’ where ‘We put up our canvas’.9

The prominence given to the foreground group incorporates an act of homage to the landscape and its owners. Tall, bearded and well built, Rowe was a striking figure, admired by his contemporaries. He frequently shared his landscapes with the Aboriginal peoples, the presence of their mia-mia, home or camp, again paralleled in Rowe’s Mount William diary entry: ‘At evening we put up our mi-mi in a scrub at about five miles from the base of the mountain, roasted our parrots, and found them the most delicately flavoured birds we had yet met with’. The mia-mia and campfire can be read as a metaphor for the Aboriginal homeland. This respect and a willingness to share with the indigenous people are seen elsewhere. Of the four Aboriginal figures, three are clad in possum cloaks, the seated male in the foreground wearing a government-issue blanket, identified by its blue line. 10 Harmony between peoples and the land continues in the two standing behind the artist. The man shares the breathtaking view with Rowe; the woman looks at his sketch. The indigenous people of central Victoria, the Djab wurrung, were once of large numbers and rich in culture, having lived on the volcanic plain for tens of thousands of years. Rowe was not alone in these sympathetic views. Ruth Pullin, the Von Guérard scholar writing recently of the Indigenous people in Von Guérard’s painting, Mr John King’s Station, 1861, said: ‘…they are depicted both on their land, yet dispossessed of it –’. ‘Their anomalous situation [she added] is expressed in their contradictory apparel …’.11

Like Von Guérard, Rowe’s breathtaking, large-scale panoramas capture the pristine wonder of the great southern land. Each arrived in the Colony in late 1852 – both in search of gold. They shared a love of the sublime in nature, the grand view topped by towering mountain ranges, and a land of plenty peopled with life in harmonious accord. While their figures provided a sense of scale, they also expressed the romantic concept of the smallness of humans compared with the might and majesty of nature. Moreover, their empathy with Aborigines was nigh identical. The gold rushes brought disruption and deforestation, disliked by both as depicted by despoiled earth and endless tree stumps. Von Guérard’s masterly paintings of Mounts William and Abrupt belong to the years 1855 and 1856, preceding Rowe’s visit to the area. It was also the beginning of the era of the ‘exhibition’ watercolour. As Andrew Sayers has pointed out: ‘In scale and presentation water-colours came to vie with oil paintings. The enormous water-colours of John Gully, Nicholas Chevalier, George Rowe and Oswald Brierly were conceived on a level of ambition previously reserved only for oil paintings’.12

After Mount William, Rowe wrote: ‘We then shaped for Ararat’.13 Our picture, George Rowe at the Diggings near Ararat, c.1858 shows the Grampians Ranges as a backdrop of mountain splendour, the town of Ararat a little closer. Although gold had been discovered nearby in 1854, it was not till 1857 that a group of Chinese miners found the gold at Ararat that created the boomtown. Rowe had worked in the area before. His panoramic The Gold Fields of Australia, Mount Ararat, c.1857 (National Library of Australia) shows the figure of a shepherd and his dog reclining on a rocky ledge overlooking a valley, with Ararat beyond.14 The first settler in the Mount William area was Horatio Wills, who established a sheep run in 1840. A comparison of the town in the two pictures shows development consistent with the time difference, schools and churches being opened from 1857 on. A courthouse was built in 1859. In our picture, a scene of desolation after the alluvial rush, mining activities occupy the near middle ground, the abundance of water for sluicing and smoke coming from the many chimneys referring to the recent change in weather encountered at Mount William – ‘…a thunder storm broke upon us, and the rain poured down in torrents’.15 Canvas tents rub shoulders with more established buildings, a horse puddler, an isolated windlass.

The eye-catching presence of the group on the rocky outcrop is characteristic of Rowe’s panoramas where foreground incidents provide narrative and added liveliness. Rowe’s gaze, however, is directed not towards the grand scene he provides for his viewer, but to new horizons, adding credence to the thought that his interests ranged beyond topographical accuracy, providing an amalgam of ideas, including interpretation through heightened awareness, carried to a level unique in his art.

It is believed that these large panoramic views were painted from sketches after his return to England in 1859. Another of similar scale, Mount Arapiles, c.1858 (private collection) with its prominent Aboriginal figures, was also possibly sketched during this visit and finished later. Other grand-sized views include the mining scenes Old Bendigo, 1857, and Ballarat, 1858, the latter peopled with Chinese diggers. Both are in the Dixson Galleries, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney.16 In 1862 Rowe exhibited ‘Six water-colour paintings of scenery in Victoria’ in the International Exhibition, London. Von Guérard showed six oil paintings in the same exhibition, one being Mount William from Mount Dryden, 1857, (Art Gallery of Western Australia).17 Rowe was the only artist to be awarded a medal, in the jurors’ words: ‘For faithful and beautiful delineation of the country, workings, and other relations of the gold fields’.18

1. George Rowe, letter to the artist’s daughter, August 1853, quoted in Blake 1982, op. cit., p. 29
2. ‘Death of Mr George Fawcett Rowe’, Bendigo Advertiser, 3 September 1889, p. 2
3. Watercolour on paper, 18.5 x 27.2 cm, NLA, NK1988
4. Blake, op. cit., p. 27
5. ‘The Bendigo Art Union’, Bendigo Advertiser, 15 May 1857, p. 3
6. ‘A Leaf from the Diary of an Artist. The Ascent of Mount William’, Age, Melbourne, 23 April 1858, p.4
7. Rowe, G., letter to Philippa Rowe, 1 and 5 January 1854, quoted in Reynolds, P., ‘George Rowe on the Bendigo Diggins’, La Trobe Library Journal, vol. 3, no. 12, October 1973, pp. 92 and 95
8. Age, 1858, op. cit.
9. ibid.
10. Pullin, R., ‘Eugène von Guérard’s Mr John King’s Station’, 1861, Estate of the Late James Fairfax, AC’, Deutscher and Hackett, 30 August 2017, lot 10, p. 55
11. ibid.
12. Sayers, A., Drawing in Australia: Drawings, Water-Colours, Pastels and Collages from the 1770s to the 1980s, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1989, p. 83
13. Age, 1858, op. cit.
14. The Gold Fields of Australia, Mount Ararat, c.1857, watercolour, 65.5 x 156.0 cm National Library of Australia, Canberra, cat. PIC R6195
15. Age, 1858, op. cit.
16. Old Bendigo, 1857, watercolour, 61.6 x 154.9 cm; Ballarat, 1858, watercolour, 62.5 x 153.7 cm. Dixson Galleries, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, cats. DG3, 853583 and DG2, 888273
17. International Exhibition, London, 1 May 1862, Von Guérard cat. 475-4, Mount William from Mount Dryden, 1857 as ‘Mount William’
18. ’Awards of the Jurors’, Department of the Colony of Victoria, Australia, International Exhibition of 1862, London, cat. 476

DAVID THOMAS
Lindsay Norman (and Jack Lindsay)view full entry
Reference: The London Aphrodite, A Literary Periodical of only 6 Issues, published in one volume upon its closing.
Edited by Jack Lindsay and P. R. Stephensen.

vignettes by Norman Lindsay.

London. Fanfrolico Press, 1928-1929.

The the journal was banned in the United States for alleged obscenity. Includes works of Aldous Huxley, Pittendrigh MacGillivray, P.R. Stephensen, amongst many others. The London Aphrodite is a controversial collection of stories, poems, and essays by various hands eminent or rebellious. 

Robert Leeson Jack Lindsay (1900-1990), an Australian-born writer, lived in the UK.

Percy Reginald Stephensen (1901-1965), an Australian writer, publisher & political activist
Publishing details: First printing. Six sections bound in one. No DJ. 9.5x6 inches, 496pp, 8vo, all six journals in 1 volume, B&W plates,
Ref: 1000
Gully John 1819-1888view full entry
Reference: The Southern Alps 1881 - Three Facsimile Prints of Watercolours by John Gully
Publishing details: [Auckland] Colour Agencies Ltd/. [1964?] Plates by Lithographic Laboratories Ltd
Printed by C M Banks Ltd
Ref: 1000
Crossland John Michaelview full entry
Reference: From DAAO: portrait painter, was born in England and studied at the Royal Academy Schools, London. He exhibited at both the Royal Academy and the Society of British Artists (Suffolk Street) between 1832 and 1845, showing portraits and Italian subject pictures at the former in 1832, 1833 and 1844. Portraits of its secretary and chaplain were painted for the St Ann’s Society, London.
Crossland and his family arrived at Port Adelaide on 21 February 1851 and settled in Adelaide, where he soon established a local reputation. Working in the fluent traditions of Late Georgian-Early Victorian portraiture, he was the most accomplished portrait painter in South Australia at this time and, after Ludwig Becker and William Strutt , the finest in any of the Australian colonies. He made his name with a series of portraits of Captain Charles Sturt , the explorer and artist. At least three versions survive (Art Gallery of South Australia, Legislative Council Chamber of the South Australian Parliament and National Portrait Gallery, London), the commissioned version for Parliament House being reported as recently completed in the Adelaide Observer of 12 March 1853.
One of his Captain Sturt – the Hero of Australian Exploration portraits was shown at the first exhibition of the South Australian Society of Arts in 1857, together with his Portrait of Thomas Gilbert (now owned by the City of Adelaide). His paintings continued to feature in the society’s exhibitions even after Crossland’s death at Encounter Bay in 1858. His oil portraits of the late Reverend Thomas Quinton Stow and Mr William Giles were also exhibited posthumously, at the Stow Memorial Church Bazaar held at White’s rooms in December 1863.
Other eminent South Australians who sat for Crossland included Governor Sir Henry Young, Lady Young, Chief Justice Sir Charles Cooper, George Fife Angas (father of G.F. Angas ) and the Very Reverend James Farrell, Anglican Dean of Adelaide. The South Australian Register praised several of these 'fine likenesses’ on 16 October 1854, as well as Crossland’s portraits of lesser lights: John Brown, emigration agent, Thomas Gilbert, colonial storekeeper, and an unnamed 'aspirant for literary fame’. His portraits of two women (conventionally anonymous) were described as: 'a fine likeness of a lady whose placid countenance assures us we may venture to describe her as an elderly matron; and another equally good likeness of a married lady, who has scarcely begun to look matronly’. Moses Garlick, an Adelaide builder, and William Giles, the second manager of the South Australian Company, probably had their portraits painted too.
Crossland’s full-length portrait of the first resident commissioner of the province, James Hurtle Fisher, painted in late December 1854 (Parliament House, Adelaide), was praised in the South Australian Register on 27 and 28 December 1854 and 7 January 1855. It had cost 70 guineas, paid by public subscription. Its 'magnificent’ carved and gilded frame by David Culley (father of John ), said to be the most ambitious ever produced in the colony, received almost equal attention, having cost the astonishing sum of 50 guineas.
The scale and accomplishment of Crossland’s full- and half-length oil portraits of European settlers were novel to South Australia and suited the new confidence of a growing community, reflecting its ambitions and increasing wealth. But it is the pair of Aboriginal portraits in the Rex Nan Kivell Collection (National Library of Australia) – Nannultera, a Young Cricketer of the Natives’ Training Institution, Poonindie and Samuel Conwillan (Kandwillan), a Catechist of the Natives’ Training Institution, Poonindie , now firmly given to his hand – that are without doubt Crossland’s major works. Both were commissioned in 1854 by Archdeacon Matthew Hale, who paid only £6 5s for the portrait of Conwillan. This seems to have been a special price for a generally admired churchman who founded Poonindie with the aim of creating 'a Christian village of Australian natives, reclaimed from barbarism and trained to the duties of social Christian life’. Samuel Conwillan’s grave portrait with Bible may be read as commemorating the achievements of the mind, whereas Nannultera’s displays the complementary quality of bodily recreation in its healthiest and highest form in Hale’s eyes – the game of cricket.
Writers:
Jones, John
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
2011
Stanley Frankview full entry
Reference: see Lawson’s online sale 3.9.17, lot 167: F. Stanley 
Portrait of an Aboriginal Man 
pencil 9charcoal?) on paper 
24.5 x 18cm 
signed lower right 
Estimate $400-600
(possibly early 20th century)
Marcet Edouardview full entry
Reference: Australie. Un voyage a travers le bush Illustrated with 20 original photographs after drawings by the author. [’photo-illustrated book by Swiss emigrant settler Marcet being a fictional work set in Queensland. The work describes the harsh conditions and difficulties of bush life with a focus on the tension between while settlers and the local Aboriginal population. 10 mounted photographic illustrations of drawings in the text after G. Liquier. Ferguson 12251.’ From Douglas Stewart Fine Books]
Publishing details: Dessins de Mm. G. Liquier et D. d’apres les indications de l’auteur. Geneve : Jules-Guillaume Fick, 1868. Octavo, gilt-lettered cloth (spine glued down), all edges gilt, pp. 268, the text set in ornamental borders with decorated initials, Printed in an edition of 200 copies.
Ref: 1000
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: Fred Williams : Pilbara feelings. Series
Colour illustrations throughout.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Ian Potter Museum of Art, 2000. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 44.
Ref: 1000
Gill S Tview full entry
Reference: 14 views of Old Adelaide. From sketches in 1840 – 1849 by S. T. Gill, F. R. Nixon, S. Calvert & O. Korn. Fourteen tinted lithographed plates interleaved with tissue.

Publishing details: [Adelaide] : E. S. Wigg & Son, n.d. [c.1880]. Oblong folio,
Ref: 1000
Nixon Francis Russellview full entry
Reference: see 14 views of Old Adelaide. From sketches in 1840 – 1849 by S. T. Gill, F. R. Nixon, S. Calvert & O. Korn. Fourteen tinted lithographed plates interleaved with tissue.

Publishing details: [Adelaide] : E. S. Wigg & Son, n.d. [c.1880]. Oblong folio,
Korn Oview full entry
Reference: see 14 views of Old Adelaide. From sketches in 1840 – 1849 by S. T. Gill, F. R. Nixon, S. Calvert & O. Korn. Fourteen tinted lithographed plates interleaved with tissue.

Publishing details: [Adelaide] : E. S. Wigg & Son, n.d. [c.1880]. Oblong folio,
Calvert Sview full entry
Reference: see 14 views of Old Adelaide. From sketches in 1840 – 1849 by S. T. Gill, F. R. Nixon, S. Calvert & O. Korn. Fourteen tinted lithographed plates interleaved with tissue.

Publishing details: [Adelaide] : E. S. Wigg & Son, n.d. [c.1880]. Oblong folio,
Arago Jacquesview full entry
Reference: Voyage autour du monde : Nouvelle édition expurgée précédée d’une introduction de Jules Janin. [’A handsomely produced children’s book, a late nineteenth century edition for children of the artist Arago’s 1823 account of his circumnavigation with Freycinet in the Uranie. The well illustrated narrative takes in Brazil, Cape of Good Hope, Mauritius, New Holland (including a description of Sydney and of Aboriginal customs), Timor, Marianas, Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), Malvinas and Paraguay]

Publishing details: Limoges : Eugene Ardant et Cie., [c 1900]. Quarto, original pictorial red cloth gilt, gilt edges, 336 pp. 45 gravure illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Gill S T view full entry
Reference: The Melbourne Rose. Part II.
[’From Douglas Stewart Fine Books: ‘A significant and very rare Melbourne publication of the gold rush era, with engravings after those of S.T. Gill in Victoria Illustrated (1857) and Victoria Illustrated. Second Series (1862). In the examples we have handled, the groupings of engravings vary. Furthermore, the scenes themselves are adapted from the Gill originals and have some embellishments. In the present example, the scenes are titled:
• View of Point Gellibrand and Williamstown from Bay
• Benevolent Asylum, North Melbourne
• Savings Bank and Chamber of Commerce, Geelong
• Crown Lands Office, Melbourne
• Melbourne Savings Bank
• Collegiate Grammar School, St. Kilda
• Suburban Railway Bridge, Hawthorn
• Ballarat East from the Camp Reserve. Mount Buninyong in the distance
• Mechanics Institution, Melbourne
• Temple Court, Melbourne
• St. Patrick’s College, Melbourne
• Johnston Steel Bridge over the Yarra, Studley Park
• Oriental Bank, Melbourne
• Melbourne Exhibition
• Revd. Irving Hetherington’s Scotch Church and Manse, Melbourne
• Melbourne, St. Kilda and Brighton Railway Bridge, St. Kilda Road
• Sir CHarles Hotman’s Monument in New Cemetary, Melbourne
• Melbourne and Hobson’s Bay Railway Station, St. Kilda
• Wesleyan Church, Melbourne
• Melbourne Protestant Orphan Asylum, Emerald Hill
• Melbourne Exchange
• Town, and Melbourne & Hobson’s Bay Railway Piers, Sandridge
• Pall Mall, Sandhurst
• Melbourne Hospital
• Chalmer’s Church, Melbourne.]

Publishing details: London : Joseph, Myers & Co., 1862 (printed in Hamburg by C. Adler’s Printing Establishment). Chromolithographed and engraved folding card in the shape of a rose, in the original gilt-printed envelope honouring Burke and Wills;
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidney 917-1992view full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Sidney Nolan. Paintings of Australia. Landscapes and Legends.
Lent by Durlacher Bros. Single sheet, illustration, short biography by Dorothy Cogswell, catalogue of 16 works, including a Kelly painting.

Publishing details: Dwight Art Memorial, South Hadley, Massachusetts, April 13 – May 3, 1959.
Ref: 1000
Harris Mary Pview full entry
Reference: SIMONS, Marian
The Innkeeper’s wife
Illustrations by Mary P. Harris. Children’s book based on the nativity.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Rigby, c. 1941. Quarto, illustrated wrappers with silver detail
stringbound, pp. 12, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Gill S T view full entry
Reference: The Swiss Rose.
[’From Douglas Stewart Fine Books: ‘S.l. : s.n., c. 1860. Engraved folding pictorial ephemeron, die cut in the shape of a rose, diameter when unfolded of 265 mm, with 28 scenes in Switzerland, two panels being the chromolithographed rose which forms the outer covers of this delightful souvenir; a couple of small paper reinforcments. A rare and delicate item, without publisher’s details but reminiscent of the series of ‘Souvenir Roses’ printed by Adler in Hamburg for the overseas markets..]

Ref: 1000
Contemporary New Zealand Art 2view full entry
Reference: Contemporary New Zealand Art 2 by Elizabeth Caughey and John Gow.The second book in the series reviewing the works of New Zealand artists across the twentieth century. Shows over 100 works from 20 artists across a range of artistic styles.
Publishing details: Auckland : David Bateman, 1999. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp 111.
Ref: 1000
Contemporary New Zealand Art 1view full entry
Reference: Contemporary New Zealand Art 1 by Elizabeth Caughey
Publishing details: David Bateman Ltd, 1997
Ref: 1000
Williamson William Tview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: William T. Williamson. Artist and educator. Ballarat School of Mines Technical Art School, c1913

The Williamson family lived at Smythesdale, moving to Ballarat for the education of their four children. The eldest child, William, attended the Ballarat High School and planned to seek employment with the Victorian Railways. Always interested in drawing he entered some of his work in the Amateur Art Exhibition of October 1913, organised by the Ballarat Ladies Art Association and held in the Ballarat Town Hall. Walter Withers, Mrs MacGeorge and former Ballarat art student Ponsonby Carew-Smyth were judges. Bill Williamson won a prize in the 'Drawing a Plant' section. Carew-Smyth, at that time the chief Education Department Art Inspector, recommended Bill enter the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) Technical Art School and train as a teacher. Bill took up the suggestion and became an Art and English in technical schools, eventually being appointed Headmaster.
Bill Williamson's sisters Daisy and Minnie both became teachers, while brother Hugh joined the Ballarat branch of the Bank of Australasia in 1916. Forty-five years later he retired as General Manager of the ANZ Bank. The Hugh D.T. Williamson Foundation has funded many projects in and around Ballarat, including the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat Mechanics' Institute, Her Majesty's Theatre, and the University of Ballarat's tapestry 'Diggers' woven by the Victorian Tapestry Workshop. Hugh D.T. Williamson felt a sense of gratitude to Ballarat for launching himself and his brothers and sisters on happy and successful careers.
This biography researched by Clare Gervasoni, August 2008.
Cannon Edwin Josephview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Edwin Joseph 'Ted' CANNON (1895-1916)
Artist, killed in action 14 September 1916

It was universally agreed that Ted Cannon was destined for great things. Born at Ballarat on 30 July 1895, Ted was the only son of Edwin and Florence Cannon. From an early age young Ted showed remarkable artistic promise and he possessed 'more than average ability.' It was a natural step for him to attend the highly regarded Technical Art School (part of the Ballarat School of Mines [SMB] campus) in 1912, where he came under the influence of principal and artist H. H. Smith. A fellow student and friend was Amalie Feild (later Colquhoun).
Precociously intelligent, he always seemed a step ahead in everything he did. Ted was devoted to his art, and devoured all areas of a full course of study. He quickly became one of the most popular students at the SMB Art School, and loved spending time with the younger students, who greatly admired him. He developed a sharp intelligence and a keen sense of humour, his cheerfulness in the face of any eventualities was perpetual.

Whilst Ted displayed a talent for industrial design, it was his black and white work that 'drew' most attention. His cartoons and caricatures, heavily influenced by Phil May, were of a particularly high standard. During the Ballarat Exhibition of 1913 Ted's work was singled out for notice and he was awarded First Prize.
After completing his art course Ted was employed as an assistant teacher at the Art School, before taking a position as cartoonist with the Ballarat Star newspaper at the end of 1914. With the war raging in Europe Ted discovered a darker aspect for his artwork, but, still, he could not resist depicting Turkey as a full-feathered, fez-wearing bird. In 1915 Ted was awarded the prestigious Victorian Education Department Senior Technical School Scholarship. Only months into his scholarship, Ted volunteered for the AIF. A keen member of the local 71st "City of Ballarat" Regiment Ted was already primed for a life in the army. He embarked from Port Melbourne on 23 November 1915 with reinforcements to the 6th Infantry Battalion bound for Egypt.
Back in Ballarat the public was entertained by Ted's letters, which were published regularly in the Ballarat Courier. Ted wrote in a breezy manner, but it did not require great imagination to discover darkness beneath the surface of his frivolity. Living on 'salty bully beef and dirty creek water' in barely adequate clothing that was infested with all manner of vermin and surviving intense bombardments that cost him 'a good few pals' made him think longingly of the comfort of home. Generally, however, he was undaunted and, invariably, parcels of drawings accompanied his letters.
It was during the Battle of Pozieres on the Western Front that Ted Cannon came into his own. His work with the Scout Platoon (under the command of Lieutenant Jack Rogers) sketching the enemy's gun emplacements proved invaluable to the Brigade and brought Ted to the attention of the Australian High Command.

Ted wrote: "Did I tell you in the lost letter that I was a scout? If I didn't do so then I do so now. It's a good game too. Just suits me right down to the ground. All through our tour of duty in the trenches I have had a sort of roving commission observing the enemy's doings, etc, from the tops of trees, battered buildings, and all sorts of funny places. It's a bit awkward at times if a sniper gets on you when you're about 30 or 40 feet above the ground in a tree - you often 'miss the step' on the way down so hastily. If you happen to have left your telescope or your compass up top in the excitement, it further complicates matters. I got in that fix the other day. Hurried down and left my compass behind. I sat down behind the tree and viewed the surroundings for about half an hour, and then made at least three attempts to get up, but before I'd get near half-way the sniper would spot me and put up a quick-firing record. I beat him in the end, though, by sitting behind the tree and writing a few letters. By the time I had finished writing he'd 'chucked it up' as a bad job and turned his attentions elsewhere... Very often, when I am dangling by my eyebrows from the limb of a high tree, trying my best to draw with one eye to the telescope and the other one on the pad, I wish I were back home again drawing bulrushes and willow trees from the banks of the Lake [Wendouree]. Some of the sketches I do here wouldn't pass muster with Mr Smith I'm sure. In places my line gets jerky and dissipated looking. This is due to a sudden cold sensation shooting through my anatomy as a bullet whistles through the tree or a shell bursts in the vicinity.
The 'message of death' that had whistled so willingly around Ted Cannon finally found its mark. On 13 September 1916 he was given a special assignment for General C. B. B. White. Ted was sent out forward of the Old Mill at Verbranden Molen (in the Ypres Salient) to draw a panorama of the German lines in the area from Hill 60 to The Bluff. It was a hazardous task and Ted was warned to be careful. Tragically he was sniped by an enemy machine-gunner and sustained severe abdominal wounds. Stretcher-bearers rushed him to the 17th Casualty Clearing Station where he was operated on by the doctors at 8.30 that night. With little chance of success, but ever resilient, Ted remained conscious almost to the end. He died early in the morning of the 14 September 1916. His body was buried in the large Military Cemetery at Lijssenthoek.
As a mark of respect to the popular young artist, Lieutenant Jack Rogers had the Scouts erect a new Observation Post in the Glide on the summit of The Bluff, which was to be marked on all maps as "Cannon's Post."
This biography written by Amanda Taylor, December 2005
Image caption (Top RHS)- Lance-Corporal E.J. Cannon, c1915.
Image caption (LHS)- Sketch by E.J. Cannon, depicting himself and mate after raiding German trenches at Pozieres, France. Published in the SMB Students Magazine, 1916.
Image caption (Top RHS)- Sketches from The Front, by E.J. Cannon. Published in the SMB Students Magazine, 1916.
Carew-Smyth Ponsonby May (1860-1939)view full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Ponsonby May Carew-Smyth (1860-1939)
Artist/Educator
Ballarat Teachers' College


Born at Cork, Ireland in 1860 Carew-Smyth trained in art and teaching at Belfast Government School. In 1885 he attended the National Art Training School, London. He married Marie Reynolds in 1890, and together they migrated to Australia. Carew-Smyth started his Australian career at the Ballarat School of Art and Design.
In 1899 Carew-Smyth was appointed inspector of drawing with the Department of Education. He was involved in the early years of Prahran and Swinburne Technical Colleges, as well as the Melbourne Working Men's College. In 1906 he was appointed chairman of the Victorian State Schools' Equipment and Decoration Society, and the Victorian State School Exhibition of the same year.

Carew Smyth designed the commemorative wall plaques installed in State Schools after World War I, and the art teachers' certificate. During the 1930s Carew-Smyth wrote on decorative arts for the 'Argus' newspaper. In mid-1936 he was acting Director of the National Gallery of Victoria.
Carew-Smyth didn't forget his talented friends at Ballarat. In 1924 he invited the Ballarat School of Art to design the official cover for the visit of the British squadron. The design was executed by Mr D. I Johnston, under the supervision of Harold H. Smith. Ponsonby Carew-Smyth died on 9 October 1939 at his South Yarra home, and was cremated.
This biography compiled by Clare Gervasoni, July 2006, updated November 2006.


Image caption (RHS): P.M. Carew-Smyth, A.R.C.A.(London), 1906. At the time that this photo was taken Carew-Smyth was Art Inspector for the Education Department of Victoria. (Cat.No.5142)
Image caption (LHS): Ponsonby Carew-Smyth (Cat.No.0294)
Image caption (Lower RHS): (Cat.No.)
Coutts Maryanneview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Dr Maryanne COUTTS (1960- )
Artist
University of Ballarat (1996-2000, 1999-2003)

Maryanne was born in Melbourne in 1960. While she was very young her family moved to Ballarat, Victoria, where she was was educated. She retains strong links to this regional city. Maryanne was born in Melbourne in 1960. 
She attended the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne from 1979 to 1981 and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (Fine Arts) Painting. She undertook further studies at the University of NSW graduating in 1984 with a Graduate Diploma in Professional Studies (Painting). She commenced a Master of Arts candidature in 1996 at the University of Ballarat converting this to a PhD candidature in 1997, receiving her Doctor of Philosophy in 2000. Her PhD thesis is entitled, "Using Narrative Strategies in Contemporary Figurative Painting".
My interest in making images which provoke narrative readings has lead me to a fascination with both the paradox of representation and the enigma of time.' Artist's statement
Maryanne has exhibited in both solo and group exhibitions in regional Victoria, Melbourne and elsewhere in Australia. She is regularly invited for inclusion in curated exhibitions and her work has been shown as a finalist in several Dobell Drawing exhibitions, the Portia Geach Memorial Award, the Moet Chandon Touring Exhibition, the Blake Prize and the Doug Moran Portrait Prize.
Her first major award was the Blake Prize that she won jointly in 1983 with the painting " Easter in my Room", now part of the collection of the Australian Catholic University, Ballarat Campus. More recently, in 2007, she won the prestigious Portia Geach Memorial Award with a self portrait titled, "Melbourne". The judging panel commented on the spatial complexity of the composition:
The work presents a profoundly satisfying integration of interior and exterior space and light which links the subjective space of artist's studio to the world outside, and by implication,to the psychological space we occupy as viewers.

During a residency at St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Maryanne extended her long-standing interest in painting narrative as well as her commitment to drawing into the area of animation. This lead to experiments with film making and enabled her 'to focus on ways that a time based approach to painting allows an unfolding of time and place.' (Artist's statement)
Maryanne has worked as a Sessional Lecturer at the Arts Academy, University of Ballarat (1999 - 2003), the Department of Fine Art and Design, Monash University, Melbourne (2000 - 2005) and the Faculty of Humanities and Social Science, Latrobe University, Bendigo Campus (2008). She was a Lecturer in the Faculty of Arts and Science, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne and Ballarat campuses (2003 - 2004). She is currently (from 2006) a Lecturer in Drawing and Painting in the Department of Fine Art, Monash University, Melbourne.
Artist's statement Working with a definition of narrative as an intersection between space, time and narrative voice, Maryanne Coutts' research investigates the nature of narrative in relation to painting. This analytic approach shifts between work which focuses on narration through self reflexive strategies and work which investigates ways of conveying time through the spatial vehicle of painting. Through an engagement with the processes of animation, she has become increasingly fascinated by the further potential to investigate a narrative space, through a time based medium.

This biography written by Margaret Rich, August 2009.
Image caption (right) - Maryanne Coutts Melbourne, 2007. [reproduced courtesy of the artist]
Image caption (left) - Maryanne Coutts receives her Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Ballarat, 2000.
Crawley Jonview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Jon CRAWLEY
Artist and Art Educator
Ballarat School of Mines Technical Art School

Jon Crawley studied art at the Ballarat School of Mines Technical Art School from 1967 to 1970. He was taught by David Kelloch, Henry Moritz, Bernie Bryan, and Geoffrey Mainwarring, who was a life long mentor to the young artist. During 1971 Jon Crawley completed a Diploma of Education at the State College of Victoria (Hawthorn), and was named dux of that year. He was appointed Head of the Art Department at Collingwood Technical School the following year, and was seconded back to the State College to Lecture in Art Education on a part-time basis. Jon was appointed full-time to the State College in 1973 and implemented an Alternative Diploma of Education for Technical School teachers. Jon Crawley obtained a Bachelor of Education, Honours, (La Trobe) in 1975, and started a Master of Education the following year.
Tiring of the Melbourne "rat-race" Jon returned to Ballarat in 1977 when a new school at Mt Clear was announced. Jon Crawley taught at the school from 1977 until early 1994. Jon then established a studio where he has run Art classes for the general public and talented children while continuing to develop his own artworks.

In 1991 Jon Crawley was invited by the Victorian Agent General to exhibit at Victoria House in London, which led to an invitation to exhibit at a fundraiser to save the London Zoo, an initiative of Prince Charles and Princess Diana. Further exhibitions ensued at the Omell Gallery in London and Taunton in Devon. Working as a full time professional artist and educator since 1994, Jon Crawley has gained a reputation for his Impressionist style watercolour, oil and pastel paintings and his delightful drawings. Jon Crawley's work has been widely exhibited in Australia. He has held over 40 exhibitions and has won upwards of 400 awards for his work, including the prestigious Camberwell Rotary Art Show. Jon has written for Australian Artist and International Artist magazines and has been contracted to illustrate around 30 books. In 2000 he was announced an International Master Water Colourist, and in 2007 won third prize in an international award conducted by Australian Artist.

Jon Crawley has been a member of the Ballarat Society of Artists since 1984, serving several terms as President. He has been a member of the Wildlife Artist's Society of Australasia, the Victorian Artist's Society, the Australian Guild of Realist Artists and the Old Watercolourist Society of London (Australian Branch). Jon Crawley's work is held in many private, public and corporate collections throughout the world. In December 2009 Jon received a certificate from the National Australia Day Council when he was nominated anonymously for "Australian of the Year" for his contribution to Art, Education and support of charitable and community bodies.
This biography prepared by Clare Gervasoni, February 2010.

Feild-Colquhoun Amalie Sarahview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Amalie Sarah Feild-Colquhoun (1894-1974)
Artist, SMB student and art mistress
Born in Murtoa Amalie Feild was educated at the Murtoa Primary School. After moving to Ballarat with her family in 1904 she first visited the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery. She taught at Sebastopol Primary School where her artistic talent was recognised and supported, and she attended the Ballarat Technical Art School, becoming its Art Mistress during the mid-1920s. The Ballarat Courier of February 1927 reported 'The Ballarat Technical Art School will suffer a severe loss in the departure of Miss Amalie Feild, who has been appointed art mistress at the Working Men's College, Melbourne. Miss Feild has been in charge of the pottery class at the Ballarat School.' Always wanting to expand her artistic talents she further pursued her studies at the Sydney Technical School, and at the famous Max Meldrum School, Melbourne. She exhibited in London, taught at Melbourne Technical College, and after marrying Archibald Colquhoun in 1931 started an art school in partnership.
Amalie exhibited extensively in Australia and England, and is represented in many elite collections. Producing a set of 'Fairy Lore' pictures, designed, compiled and lithographed in Australia, the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) Student's Magazine of 1925 wrote: 'Miss Amalie Field [sic] of the Art School staff, has lately added to her laurels by gaining distinction in commercial art circles. In this respect she has proved a pioneer by designing and illustrating a set of nursery rhymes suitable for kindergarten use, and having them printed locally by Mr David Cochrane, who is also an old student of the School.'
Ballarat's St Andrew's Kirk and Lydiard Street Uniting Church, as well as Mount Pleasant Methodist Church boast stained glass windows made to Amalie's design. In regards to the J.Y. McDonald Memorial window at St Andrew's Kirk, the 'Ballarat Courier' wrote "The handsome memorial windows erected in St Andrew's Kirk to the memory of Mrs Stephen Murphy (Daughter of Mr and Mrs John Macleod) and the Hon. J.Y. McDonald, and unveiled yesterday by the Very Rev. John Walker, were designed by that talented artist, Miss M. Field [sic], of Ascot street north, who is a teacher at the Technical Art School, of which Mr H.H. Smith is principal. Miss Field not only designed the windows, but went specially to Sydney to supervise their construction by Mr Fred Tarrant. The window to Mrs Murphy represents the figure of Dorcas, and that of the Hon. J.Y. McDonald is designed to illustrate the parable, 'Well done thou good and faithful servant'. Miss Feild has also designed another fine window which is to be placed in St Andrew's Kirk within the next month or two." Another report stated: "... they are very fine specimens of the art, and Mr Tarrant has written to Mr Smith [principal] expressing admiration for the way in which Miss Feild has successfully gone out of the beaten track in her design."
Well loved by those around her 'Innocent' wrote the following poem which was published in the 1916 SMB Student's Magazine:
OH! MY.
And who is she, in some quiet spot,
Sits demure and wants to swot;
Whoe'er it be, I'm sure it's not Amalie.
Who is the girl when all is quiet,
Bursts into action, starts a riot;
And if she's caught, then she'll decry it,
Why, of course, Amalie.
There is a girl within the School,
Quiet, serene, ne'er breaks a rule;
And now you read this, well then you'll
Agree it's not Amalie.
Amalie Feild-Colquhoun was well respected in artistic and teaching circles. Shen died in 1974, aged 80.
This biography written by Di Campbell, December 2005, updated March 2008.

Gude Gildaview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Gilda GUDE (1918- )
Artist
SMB

Born in Ballarat, Gilda Gude became known as a painter and teacher. The Sister of Nornie Gude, Gilda also studied at the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) Technical Art School, and was awarded a part MacRobertson Art Scholarship in 1937. Gilda Gude won the Melbourne Royal Art Society Drawing Prize in 1952. She lectured in art at RMIT from 1961. Her work is represented in the National gallery of Victoria and the University of Ballarat Art Collection.


We are currently seeking further information on Gilda Gude. If you are able to assist please email the curator c.gervasoni@federation.edu.au.
This biography written by Clare Gervasoni, 4 June 2008.
Image caption (RHS)- Cartoon by Gilda Gude, as published in the SMB Students' Magazine, 1934.
Image caption (LHS)- Gilda Gude's letter to the SMB Council thanking them for offering her a part MacRobertson's Scholarship, 20 March 1937.
Gude Nornieview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Nornie GUDE
Artist
SMB student 1932-1936

At the age of 15 years Eleanor [Nornie] Gude was so advanced in painting she was accepted into the Ballarat Technical Art School. In 1937 she won its prestigious MacRobertson Scholarship in art, valued at £100 per annum. By that time she had progressed to the National Gallery of Victoria School (NGV), Melbourne (1936-1939) where her fellow students included Sidney Nolan, Charles Bush and Laurence Pendlebury (the latter whom she married).
Nornie won numerous awards whilst studying drawing and painting at the NGV School. Although she was principally recognised for her expertise with watercolour, Nornie also received awards for her work in oils: in December 1939 she won both first and second prizes in a competition for NGV students, judged by Max Meldrum, Harold Herbert and James Quinn. She became the first woman to win the National Gallery Students Travelling Scholarship; in 1941 she won the landscape prize.

Throughout the 1940s and 50s Nornie won numerous prizes for her watercolours. She was especially fond of painting children. In 1958, Nornie won the Voss Smith Prize and undertook an extensive study tour through England and Europe. She won the Robin Hood and the E.T. Cato prizes in 1959. Later awards included the Pring Prize (1970), Doug Moran Naval Prize (1988) and the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize (1990).
As an artist, Nornie held no theories and was once heard to say, "You spend your first 20 years learning the technique and the next 20 years losing it." Nornie Gude is represented in the Federation University Australia Art Collection (previously known as University of Ballarat), at the National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of Western Australia and Parliament House, Canberra; regional galleries at Albury, Ballarat, Bendigo, Castlemaine, Geelong, and institutional and private collections.
She died at Hawthorn, Melbourne on 24 January 2002 aged 86 years.
This biography written by Di Campbell, 19 October 2005.
Image caption (RHS)- Nornie Gude, 1934.
Image caption (HHS)- Ballarat school of Mines Magazine Committee, 1934. Back L-R: J. Hopwood, H. Mortimer, J. Mole. Centre L-R: J. Skelton, D. Shore, A. Collins, A. Loughton, R. Warnock, L. Bailey. Front L-R: J. Graham, M. Wilson, Dr Pound, G. Netherway, Nornie Gude.
Herbert Haroldview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Harold Herbert
Artist/Educator
Ballarat Technical Art School (a division of the Ballarat School of Mines)

Harold Brocklebank Herbert (1891-1945), was born on 16 September 1891 at Ballarat, Victoria. He married Dorothea Agnes O'Leary at Fitzroy, Melbourne, on 9 October 1935.
He studied architecture and applied design at the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery Technical School of Design later transferring to the Ballarat School of Mines Technical Art School. Herbert's talents were early recognized by Ponsonby Carew-Smyth, art inspector with the Victorian Education Department, and former Ballarat Art Educator.
Herbert moved to Melbourne in 1912 to become Carew-Smyth's assistant. Three years later he returned to teach at his old school, abandoning teaching in 1919.
Herbert travelled to England, France, Spain and Morocco for eighteen months in 1922-23 . On his return his first major exhibition in Melbourne was a huge success with every work being sold.
Herbert's friendship with Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas Blamey resulted in his appointment as an official war artist in early 1941. He resigned after six months in the Middle East and until 1944 was an accredited war correspondent for the Australasian.
Harold Herbert died in Melbourne on 11 February 1945.
Image Caption: Ballarat School of Mines Students Magazine 
Standing back left to right: Allan Bernaldo, S. Hoskin
Centre left to right: J. Wood; Noel Brelaz; H. Jolly; Albert E. Williams; Richard W. Richards, N. Green; H. Maddison
Front left to right: Harold Herbert; Maurice Copland; Alfred Mica Smith; McConnon; D. McGrath
Longstaff Willview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: William Longstaff (1879-1953)
Artist, Boer War Veteran
SMB

Born at Ballarat on 25 December 1880, William Frederick Longstaff was a cousin of John Longstaff. William was a student at Ballarat's Grenville College, and also studied freehand drawing at the Ballarat School of Mines in 1890, as well as privately. He sailed to London as a twenty year old to pursue his art education, but joined the British forces in the South African war at Durban before reaching his destination. He served as a trooper in charge of remounts with the South African Light Horse for 16 months from 6 April 1900.
After returning to Ballarat Longstaff once again set sail for London, escaping an unsuccessful marriage. William Longstaff studied at Heatherley School of Fine Art in London in 1908, and Vivian's in Paris. During his time in Paris the 'Fauve' movement was developing. William Longstaff returned to Victoria teaching art privately in 1910 and with Leslie Wilkie in 1911. Longstaff joined the AIF in October 1915, embarking for Egypt in November with the 1st Australian Remount Unit. His file includes a letter outlining his Boer War experience and the following lines 'Have been amongst horses all my life and have a pretty good knowledge of their ailments , also their good and bad points.' He was invalided to England in October 1917, and in 1918 worked in camouflage before being appointed to the 2nd Divisional Division Headquarters as a divisional artist under the Australian Record Section War Art Scheme. At the end of the war William Longstaff applied to be discharged from the army in England so he could return to France to complete a series of battle pictures with the intention of exhibiting them in Australia the following year. William Longstaff his known for his work 'Menin Gate at Midnight' which is in the Australian War Memorial Art Collection.
Longstaff was living in London in 1932, at the time of the Great Depression, and he turned to portraiture and watercolour landscape to make a living. He died at Littlehampton, Sussex on 1 July 1953.


This biography prepared by Clare Gervasoni, October 2007, updated 05 July 2012.
Image caption (RHS): William Longstaff in uniform (Cat.No.4229)
Trengrove Thomasview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Artist
Ballarat Technical Art School
Thomas Trengrove was a student of Grenville College before attending the Ballarat East Art School. In 1900, at the age of 21, he was appointed a junior art teacher at the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB). He was an art assistant when Trengrove left for Stawell in 1908 where he was the Technical School art master for 14 years.
Tregrove returned to Ballarat in 1922 as senior instructor in modelling and ceramics, a position he held until his retirement in 1945. The SMB Students Magazine reported: 'From Stawell we welcome as a member of the Art School staff, Mr Trengrove, who is deeply interested in pottery experiments.'

In 1924 the Courier reported a distinction for the School: 'The Victorian Education Department is bearing the cost of the erection of a school at Villers Bretonneux, in France, out of the funds raised by Victorian State Schools. The design provides for a pilastern on each side of the Assembly Hall, each of these is to bear a carving of an Australian bird or animal, while a dado of Australian wood is to be placed round the hall. The work has been entrusted to the Ballarat Technical Art school, and will be carried out in Queensland maple from drawings by the chief architect. The selection of the school is another of the proofs constantly being given of the esteem in which the school is held by the Department.' By January 1925 the progress was outlined: 'Mr Trengrove, of the staff of the Ballarat Technical Art School, is engaged on the carving of ornamentations for the school at Villers-Bretonneux, in France, ... The carvings represent Australian flora and fauna, one of which Mr Trengrove has nearly completed representing a kookaburra, gum leaves, and fruit.'
Interestingly John E. Grant from Daylesford Technical School is accredited with completing twelve of the carved panels. It is believed that Grant carved the first twelve images depicted, with Trengrove being responsible for the last four.
The building of the Villers-Bretonneux Memorial School was made possible by the donation of 12,500 pounds from the Education Department's War Relief Fund. It came about after the 1921 decision that citizens of Melbourne adopt the town of Villers-Bretonneux and provide money to rebuild the ruined houses after World War one, one of which was the schoolhouse. The Assembly Hall interior was panelled in Victorian blackwood, the design including 16 pilasters, each of which was surmounted with a carved cap representing Australian flora and fauna. The timber is beech with a frame of blackwood. The school was seen as a permanent memorial to the valour and devotion of the Australians who fell in defence of Villers-Bretonneux in 1918.
(Are you able to help us with photographs of Thomas Trengrove's work at Villers Bretonneux? If so please contact the Curator c.gervasoni@federation.edu.au)
This biography researched by Clare Gervasoni, November 2006.

Caption: Thomas Trengrove's pilasters at the Villers Bretonneux School, 1925. (Cat.No. 7105.7)
Trompf Percival Albert (1902-1964)view full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Artist
Ballarat Technical Art School
Percival Albert TROMPF (1902-1964)
Commercial Artist
Ballarat Junior Technical School (c1916-c1917), SMB Technical Art School (c1920-23)


Percy Trompf was born at Beaufort before the family moved to Ballarat where Trompf was educated at Sebastopol Primary School before becoming one of the earliest students at the Ballarat School of Mines' Ballarat Junior Technical School where he received his certificate in 1917. He also undertook the Ballarat Technical Art School Industrial Design Course in 1916. During his Art training Percy Trompf was part of the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) Students Magazine committee, serving as editor in 1921 and Secretary in 1922, the same year he held the position of secretary of the SMB Students' Association.
Trompf joined the Melbourne commercial art firm of Giles & Richards The Ballarat Star reported on 18 May 1923: Mr Percy Trompf, a student of the School of Mines Art School, who recently passed a series of examinations, has secured an excellent position in the office of Messrs Giles and Richards, commercial advertisers, of Melbourne. Trompf later established his own studio where he employed a number of artists.

In 1928 Trompf was an office bearer on the inaugural committee of the SMB Past Students Melbourne branch. In that year he wrote an article for the SMB Magazine relating to hints for future Commercial Artists: ... With regard to poster work particularly, lighting is the all-important factor. Strong light and shadow thrown on the objects of figures to be painted, if carefully reproduced by the artist, will make the poster concerned stand out on the hoardings, even if details are left out and nothing but two tones to each color are included. For example, take a figure of a man in a dark-blue overcoat. It that subject were treated in two tones for flesh (light and shade) and two tones of blue for the overcoat (light and shade), then the result would be an ideal poster. All this, of course, simply relates to method of treatment; and it is taken for granted that drawing, lettering and general layout of the poster are good.
Further, whenever possible, the student should consult any friends connected with printing, lithography and engraving, and gather general information about the various methods by which the efforts of after-years will be reproduced. One's reputation commercially is largely dependent on these sister-crafts; and therefore it is obvious that the artist who dies work which is easy to reproduce successfully, will build up a better name than the equally good artist without such technical knowledge. P. Trompf. (SMB Students' Magazine, 1928.
By 1933 Trompf was well-known as a poster artist. He offered to judge the poster competition held at Ballarat's first Ideal Homes Exhibition. Many students from the Ballarat Technical Art School entered posters in the state wide competition.
The Ballarat Artists' Society, closely associated with the Ballarat School of Mines, invited Percy Trompf to deliver a lecture on what constitutes a good poster and how its construction should be approached in September 1947. At that time Trompf was a Flight Lieutenant with the R.A.A.F. He was commissioned as a pilot in June 1942 also working as a camouflage officer.

Percy Trompf died at Heidelberg on 17 July 1964. He is best known for his railway posters, Bryant and May posters, and the Captain Cook poster.

This biography compiled by Clare Gervasoni, January 1911. If you are able to assist in providing further information on Percy Trompf please email the curator c.gervasoni@federation.edu.au

Image Caption (right): Percy Trompf, editor of the Ballarat School of Mines Students' Magazine, 1921
Image Caption (left): Ballarat Junior Technical School (BJTS) Senior Cadet Team, 1918. In 1918 The BJTS cadets won competitions at Stawell, Colac, Maryborough, St Arnaud, Mildura and Ballarat's South Street 'A' Grade. Back: R. Hirt; PERCY TROMPF; J. Nicholls; R. Serjeant; J. Jones; A. Hannah; A. Duncan; L. Lindsay.
Centre: H. Ashley; H. Beanland; J. Finlayson; F. Larkin; G. Chambers; A. McCallum; T. Shattock; E. Rowsell.
Front: Sgt A. Roe; J. Dulfer, Mjr Samuel E. Tucker; Lt H. Wakeling; Sgt-Mjr Reeves; Sgt K. Krahnert; W. Middleton. (Cat. No. 202)
Image Caption (right): Ballarat School of Mines Students' Magazine Committee, 1922. Back row from left: H.A. Palmer (Chemistry); G.R. Simons (BJTS); PERCY TROMPF (Treasurer).
Middle row from left: H.R. Nicholls (Trade); Claudia McIlvena (Art); G. Tunbridge (Art); V. Gilchrist; E. McKissock (Art); G.W. Cowdell (Military)
Front row from left: M. Timmings; A.W. Middleditch; R.S. Russell (editor); H. Jolly (staff); D.R. Evans (sport). (Cat. No. 536.1)
See Courier 18.5.1923 7 22.7.1929 & Courier 9.9.1947
Federation University Australia Art Collection Ballaratview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Federation University Australia Art Collection Instigators

In June 1950 Arthur J. Law, Principal at Melbourne Teachers' College said: 'We have been building up a collection of paintings - chiefly originals by leading Australian artists. A conservative evaluation is 1,600 pounds ... It is not enough for students to be about Art; they should be able to live with examples of good art.' This vision was taken up by many teachers' colleges around Victoria, including at Ballarat. Today Federation University Australia benefits from, and continues this vision, seeking to develop and maintain a permanent collection of high quality works of visual art for the cultural enrichment of its student body, staff and wider community.
The art collection consists largely of works by Australian artists, the earliest of which dates from 1909 with the donation of 'Claim of the Waterloo Mine Co.' This work depicts the Ballarat goldfield at the location on which the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) was built. Works from the 1920s and 1930s showcase students from the SMB Art School, but the greatest period of art collection occurred at the Ballarat Teachers' College during the 1950s and 1960s. During that time smart collecting, and student contributions used for art purchases, resulted in the acquisition of works by emerging artists including Leonard French, James Gleeson, George Johnson and Inge King.

The works initially collected during the Ballarat Teachers' College era were carefully selected by art staff members Arch Cuthbertson and Ted Doney, then in subsequent years, leading to the formation of Ballarat College of Advanced Education, by staff members of the Art Department. Following the amalgamation at the Mt Helen Campus members of the Art Acquisitions Committee have included Bob Allen, Dr David Alexander, Greg Binns, Loris Button, Clare Gervasoni, and Geoff Wallis. 
Former students of the Ballarat Teachers' College are acknowledged for their interest and financial contributions. At the 1959 unveiling of the 'Tapestry' mural by Leonard French artist Charles Bush stated: 'The 1959 students have left something not just to 'ooh' and 'ah' at, but something that is thought provoking, arresting and interesting. This work of art keeps something in reserve and draws you to search for deeper meaning behind the splendour of colour. This mural is not one from which will fade the interest of its beholders, but one which will provide intrigue for generations to come. ... the students of this College have set the opening for a greater and wider appreciation of contemporary art within this 'City of Art'.
When the Ballarat Teachers' College / State College of Victoria at Ballarat collection was moved to the Mount Helen Campus Ian Page had responsibility for the display in the School of Education. The Leonard French mural was the pride and joy of the collection. Since that time the art collection has been augmented with various contemporary prints, ceramics, graphics, paintings and sculptures, often highlighting the work of graduates, postgraduates and staff of the University.
A complete listing of works in the Federation University Australia Art Collection (previously known as University of Ballarat) can be found at http://victoriancollections.net.au/organisations/federation-university-australia-art-collection

This overview prepared by Clare Gervasoni, 2 February 2006, updated 31 July 2006, January 2008, 13 August 2014
Image caption (RHS): Claim of the Waterloo Mining Company, 1909. Artist Unknown. (Cat.No.UB291)
Image caption (LHS): Drawing Ornament from Cast in Light and Shade', c1920, by Albert E. Williams (Cat.No.UB517)
Image caption (RHS): 'Tapestry' by Leonard French.
Walters Wesview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Wes WALTERS (1928-2014)
Artist
Ballarat Technical Art School

Wesley Walters was born at Mildura in 1928, his family moving to Ballarat when Wes was six months old. Walters was educated at Pleasant Street State School and Ballarat High School, where he excelled in sport and was a champion athlete. After a year studying architecture at Gordon Institute of Technology, Geelong, Walters returned to Ballarat where he studied art at the Ballarat School of Mines (SMB) during 1947 to 1948. At SMB Walters studied under Neville Bunning and Taylor Kelloch, and was awarded the Ballarat Ladies Art Association Scholarship in 1948.
Walters moved to Melbourne in 1948 and began his professional career in advertising at the art department of George Patterson Pty Ltd. At night he studied life drawing at the Victoria Artists' Society, and taught himself anatomy. In 1950 Walters began a highly successful free-lance career.
Walters was awarded the 1963 Australian Commercial and Industrial Artists' Association's Award of Distinctive Merit. In 1953 and 1956 he won the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery's Minnie Crouch Watercolour Prize. Full-time advertising work was replaced by painting during the 1970s, and many successful exhibitions followed. Wes Walters is known for his portraits, and he has painted numerous commissioned works including including Senator Neville Bonner, Sir Donald Bradman and Dame Elisabeth Murdoch. His 'Portrait of Phillip Adams' won the 1979 Archibald prize for portrait painting.

Although Walters had been painting in a non-figurative style since the early 1960s, he did not hold his first exhibition of abstract works until 2001. He was elected to the Illustrators Hall of Fame in 1993.
In 2009 the book by Walters: art of realism & abstraction by David Thomas was published.
The work of Wes Walters is found in many collections, including national and state galleries around Australia. A number of works by Wes Walters form part of the Federation University Art Collection see http://victoriancollections.net.au/organisations/federation-university-australia-art-collection?q=Wes+Walters
Wes Walters died on 19 August 2014.
This biography researched by David Thomas, February 2006, and updated by Clare Gervasoni in August 2014.
Image Caption (RHS): Wes Walters.
Image Caption (LHS): Wes Walters stands in front of an early non-figurative painting at his home, February 2005. (Photograph: Clare Gervasoni)
Wills Marcusview full entry
Reference: From Federation University Australia website: Marcus WILLS (1972-)
Artist
University of Ballarat, Horsham Campus

Born at Kaniva, Marcus Wills studied for an Advanced Certificate of Art and Design between 1989 and 1901 at the Wimmera Community College of TAFE (now Federation University Australia's Horsham Campus). He later studied at the Victorian College of the Arts where he completed a Bachelor of Fine Art (Painting) 1995.
Bram Stephenview full entry
Reference: Stephen Bram, Mutlu Hassan, Andrew Shields (no biographical information)
Publishing details: George Paton Gallery, 1988
Ref: 1000
Schoenbaum Sam view full entry
Reference: Melancholia - works on paper. Includes essays by Daniel Thomas and Richard Howard. Includes biography.
Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 1996, 16pp
Ref: 224
Paintings from the Desertview full entry
Reference: Paintings from the Desert - Contemporary Aboriginal Paintings, with essay by Gabrielle Pizzi. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: University of Tasmania, 1990, 24pp
Ref: 1000
Spinifex Runnerview full entry
Reference: Spinifex Runner - education kit. Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fibre Art
Publishing details: Campbelltown City Gallrty, 1999
Ref: 1000
Lewitt Vivienne Sharkview full entry
Reference: Ros Oxley9 Gallery catalogue
Publishing details: 1995
Ref: 1000
Federated Australiaview full entry
Reference: Federated Australia - Its Sceneries and Splendours. A Collection of Photographic Views, Depicting Sceneries, Cities, Industries, and Interesting Phases of Australian Life., New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, and Tasmania. Cover title: Federated Australia its sceneries and splendours, commemorative volume
Publishing details: London 1901, 1901. Landscape format. In publisher's red cloth over boards, 2 parts, 192 and 191 pp
Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: see Federated Australia - Its Sceneries and Splendours. A Collection of Photographic Views, Depicting Sceneries, Cities, Industries, and Interesting Phases of Australian Life., New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, and Tasmania. Cover title: Federated Australia its sceneries and splendours, commemorative volume
Publishing details: London 1901, 1901. Landscape format. In publisher's red cloth over boards, 2 parts, 192 and 191 pp
Shaw George Bairdview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information. ‘Artist: George Baird Shaw (Also known as Baird Shaw)
Born: 23 March 1812, Edinburgh Scotland
Died: 18th September 1883
Places of Residence in Australia:
• Castlereagh Street, Sydney, New South Wales
• 1868 Burton Street, Sydney, New South Wales
• 1867 Ward Street, North Adelaide, South Australia
• Crown Street, Sydney, New South Wales
• South Australia
Baird was a painter, illustrator, photographer, engraver and lithographer. He was born on 23 March 1812 in Dumfries, Scotland, elder son of James and Isabella Shaw.
His younger brother was the painter James Shaw whom he later followed to Australia. Both boys were taught to draw, paint and lithograph by their father and probably accompanied him on local sketching expeditions. George was sent to the Academy of Fine Arts at Trieste, Italy, to perfect his artistic skills.
After returning to Scotland he was commissioned to do the illustrations for the Abbotsford edition of Sir Walter Scott’s works and, later, the engravings for Lockhardt’s Life of Scott. For several years, he also worked as an illustrator on the London Art Journal.
In January 1851 Shaw arrived in the Titan at Dunedin, New Zealand. A surviving view of the town dated that year (Hocken Library, University of Otago) may be the view he exhibited in November and was proposing to make into a lithograph. It was not executed due to lack of support. In 1856 Shaw left New Zealand for Australia. First he visited his brother in Adelaide, showing Othello and Iago and Edinburgh, from the Calton Hill as an Adelaide resident at the first exhibition of the South Australian Society of Arts in 1857. Then he settled in Crown Street, Sydney. Over the next decade Shaw completed a series of portraits, some drawn, some engraved, of Sydney politicians and clergy. Surviving lithographs include portraits of Bishop Frederick Barker, Dean William Cowper, Sir Daniel Cooper (Speaker of the House of Assembly) and Sir Stewart Donaldson.
Shaw returned to South Australia in 1866, again presumably to see James, who had been living there since 1850. In 1867 he was listed as a resident of Ward Street, North Adelaide. Several proof copies of his engravings were shown in December 1866 with the South Australian Society of Arts, among them one of The Silver Cord Loosed after the Scottish artist Sir Joseph Noel Paton. At the society’s 1867 exhibition he was awarded the 5-guinea prize for the best South Australian oil landscape painting, not less than 30 × 20 inches (76.2 × 50.8 cm) in size, by a resident South Australian artist. His winning exhibit, the view from the hill opposite Beyer’s garden looking down the main East Adelaide road, was thought ‘tolerably correct’ by the South Australian Advertiser, ‘but the position chosen is, for artistic purposes, unfortunate. Our hills, especially in Spring, offer to the eye such an unvarying mass of brilliant green that a wearisome sameness in the picture is almost inevitable’.
Platts notes that Shaw revisited Christchurch (NZ) later in 1867. The following year he was living in Sydney, at 128 Burton Street, when the Sydney Morning Herald reported: ‘Mr Shaw, well known as an engraver, has commenced an attentive study of lush vegetation and is preparing to give us some truthful representations of it. He has made a pretty little sketch of Willoughby Falls, on the North Shore, and has succeeded in catching the general characteristics of the scene very well … if … enabled to be as steady and faithful a copyist of nature as, graver in hand, he has been of works of art, he will produce some very valuable pictures of Australian scenery’.
He showed three landscapes – Harbour View, from Double Bay, On the Manning River and Macleay Heads and Trial Bay – at the 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibition, together with a painting titled Cavalier and Ladye which was disqualified because it was not an original work. Then living at 160 Castlereagh Street, he remained there throughout the 1870s. At the 1877 exhibition of the New South Wales Academy of Art he showed a watercolour, The Bass Rock (for sale at 20 guineas), a ‘crayon’ portrait of A. Roberts MD, and an oil painting, The Pets (12 guineas). Said to have been a photographer in Edinburgh, G.B. Shaw is not known to have practised professionally in Australia. The photographs used as the basis of his portrait lithographs were not necessarily taken by him
Collections
National Portrait Gallery
National Library Australia
State Library of NSW
Mitchell Library
Reference: Dictionary of Australian Artists to 1870 (Kerr) page 717-718’
Publishing details: Day Fine Art, 2017, pb, 34pp
Huddlestone William Bennettview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information: ‘Born: c1849 (UK)
Died: c1915 (Sale Victoria)
Huddlestone a professional artist and a member of the Manchester Art Society arrived in Australasia  c1890. He stopped around New Guinea and possibly other islands before arriving in Sydney.
An intrepid and entrepreneurial character, Huddlestone travelled across Australia and New Zealand working to gain patronage and teaching painting classes.
From newspaper advertising placed in local papers from 1890-1913, it appears Huddlestone moved frequently and exhibited up the Coast of Australia. He spent the bulk of his time in NSW and QLD.
He also was known to have been a commission War artist for the ‘Graphic’ and documented the Zulu wars.
He visited New Zealand or a period between c 1896-8 and according to postal records possibly lived in Munro Street, Newton, Auckland.
He visited North Island gold-mines around this time and painted at least three of them in oils: The Kathleen Mine, Coromandel, the Union Battery at Waihi, both in 1897 and the Hauraki Main Lodes Mine, Coromandel in 1898.
An advertisement in the Thames star for 26 November 1896 reads: “Atelier des Art. W Huddlestone, M.A.F.A., artist, Thames, member of the Manchester Academy (England), exhibitor at the Royal Academy (London), is open to accept commissions to paint picturesque views of Mines and has just completed the following:”Tailing Mill Tararu”, “May Queen Mine.” Queen of Beauty” (Thames-Hauraki Mine) etc. Patrons Lords Carrington, Jersey, Glasgow Major Elliott, Sir W. Hamilton (late Governor of Tasmania), Lady Martin (N.S.W.)”
Huddlestone travelled with a companion named Theodora Drew. She was about 25 years his junior and he seems to have represented himself as her uncle. He was even given the title of her father by one of the newspapers covering their intrepid exhibitions. They spent 20 years on the road together travelling as far as New Zealand. It is reasonably safe to assume that they had an ongoing relationship and that he was not her father or uncle.
His death in Sale was likely from ongoing health issues advertised in the papers as early as 1913. A notice was placed in ‘The Age’ (Victorian Newspaper) on Saturday the 22nd of May inserted by a heart broken T.D (Theodora Drew) stating that he passed away on the 18th May 1915 in  Gippsland Hospital.

The Age 22nd May 1915 (page 5)
Compiled with the help of Col Fullagar of Integrity Resolutions.’
Castle John Downs 1858-1928view full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art catalogue Gallery Selection 2017, mainly colonial art. Includes short essay on most artists and biographical information:
Fitzjames Michaelview full entry
Reference: Australian Galleries (Melbourne) invite with 8 colour illustreations
Publishing details: Australian Galleries, 2017, 6pp
Ref: 43
Posters Australian & Internationalview full entry
Reference: Josef Lebovic Gallery exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: May 2009
Ref: 56
One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Libraryview full entry
Reference: One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Mitchell Sir Thomas lithograph of Donahoeview full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Degotardi John Jnr p21view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Dupain Max albumview full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Cazneaux Harold - de Groot photographview full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Harvey John linocut 1933view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Williams Rhys wc cover for pulp novel p36view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Robinson George Augustus - journal drawings p63view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
von Guerard Eugene - oil cabbage trees p87view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Backler Joseph- portrait of Sarah Cobcroft p88view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Stone Sarah - view of Sir Ashton Lever Museum 1785 p89view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Pellion Alphonse 1796-1868 p90-1view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. in association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010. (Works by Pellion in the SLNSW).
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
McRae Tommy p98view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Scott Harriett p106-7view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Lewin John William Birds of NSW p108-9view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Close Edward Charles p116-9view full entry
Reference: see One Hundred - A tribute to the Mitchell Library, with an essay by David Marr. n association with One hundred, a free exhibition celebrating the Mitchell Library centenary, 9 March - 15 June 2010.
Publishing details: State Library of New South Wales, 2010 
136 p. : col. ill. ; 24 cm.
Photofileview full entry
Reference: Photofile - Journal. Numbering starts with v.2, no.2 (winter 1984). Numbering changed in 1990
Published 3 times yearly since 1991.
Selective full text available in an electronic version through Australian Public Affairs - Full Text at http://search.informit.com.au/search;res=APAFT/ [Former Title: Australian Centre for Photography. Gallery newsletter] 3 issues yearly from 1991. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Paddington, N.S.W. : Australian Centre for Photography, 1983- 
v. : ill. ; 44 cm. To v. 98 (2017)
Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: see Photofile - Journal. Numbering starts with v.2, no.2 (winter 1984). Numbering changed in 1990
Published 3 times yearly since 1991.
Selective full text available in an electronic version through Australian Public Affairs - Full Text at http://search.informit.com.au/search;res=APAFT/ [Former Title: Australian Centre for Photography. Gallery newsletter] 3 issues yearly from 1991.
Publishing details: Paddington, N.S.W. : Australian Centre for Photography, 1983- 
v. : ill. ; 44 cm. To v. 98 (2017)
Island to Islandview full entry
Reference: Island to Island - Australia to Cheju. The work of Vivienne Binns, Neil Emmerson, Fiona Foley, Rosalie Gascoigne and Judy Watson
Publishing details: Cheju Pre-Biennale 1995, 4pp
Ref: 224


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