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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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

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Mortensen Kevinview full entry
Reference: The alchemist / Kevin Mortensen
Publishing details: Gippsland Art Gallery, [2018] 
1 folded sheet (8 unnumbered pages): colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Duxbury Lesleyview full entry
Reference: Echo: a survey / Lesley Duxbury
by Duxbury, Lesley

Publishing details: Sale, Victoria : Gippsland Art Gallery
Ref: 1000
Hannaford Marlie view full entry
Reference: Marlie Hannaford : a life in art / Martin Basedow by Hannaford, Marlie, 1927-2017. A catalogue of some of the art created by Marlie Hannaford (1927-2017). Includes a brief biography of the artist.

Publishing details: [Myrtle Bank, South Australia] : Martin Basedow, [2018] , 199 pages : chiefly colour illustrations, portraits (some colour) ; (hardback)

Ref: 1000
Withers Walter1000view full entry
Reference: [WITHERS, Walter]. “WAYFARER” [ie: PUETTMANN, Herman Willhelm].
Pen and Pencil in Collins Street. With original illustrations by Walter Withers.illustrated with charming vignettes by the Australian Impressionist. A delightful and fragile little Victorian volume with skilled sketches by the artist.
Publishing details:
Melbourne: Melville, Mullen & Slade, n.d. [1891]. Small quarto, original illustrated wrappers (edges rubbed, a couple of light creases), 32 pp.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see [POSTER] Paintings by Albert Tucker 11th April – 7th May 1957. South Kensington [London] : Imperial Institute, 1957. Large broadsheet poster, 380 x 250 mm, on yellow paper with red and black lettering, featuring a reproduction of one of Tucker’s figurative paintings. Catalogue for the exhibition extant?
Bell Richardview full entry
Reference: Richard Bell : Positivity. Brisbane aboriginal artist Richard Bell’s work develops out of protest politics, responding to a history of oppression and discrimination. While he challenges non-aboriginal artists who appropriate aboriginal imagery, he is an appropriation artist himself, borrowing from artists like Imants Tillers and Emily Kngwarreye to score his points. His recent works draw extensively on the comics-appropriating pop art of Roy Lichtenstein, who made dot canvasses before Papunya.
Bell’s work is a series of timely provocations: he critiques the appropriators of aboriginal art, he challenges the perceived divide between traditional and modern aboriginal art, and he inverts black/white stereotypes. He is famous for Bell’s Theorem: ‘Aboriginal Art—it’s a white thing’. After winning the 2003 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award, he generated a national controversy by collecting his award in a T-shirt with the slogan ‘White Girls Can’t Hump’. Positivity surveys Bell’s agit-pop work from the early 1990s to now.

Publishing details: Brisbane : Institute of Modern Art, c. 2007.
My Countryview full entry
Reference: McLEAN, Bruce (editor)
My Country, I still call Australia home : Contemporary art from Black Australia. Published to coincide with a major exhibition of the same name, My Country features the work of over 130 artists around Australia and makes an important contribution to writing on Aboriginal art. Interviews with exhibiting artists highlight their experiences and approach to art practice, while essays by respected writers Hetti Perkins, Brenda L Croft, Glenn Iseger-Pilkington and Bruce McLean provide insights into the connections Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists have with land and country. Arranged according to the exhibition’s themes — my country, my history, my life — this publication is rich in imagery, ideas and narrative.

Publishing details: Brisbane : Queensland Art Gallery/ Gallery of Modern Art, 2013. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 192, illustrated.

Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: McLEAN, Bruce (editor)
My Country, I still call Australia home : Contemporary art from Black Australia. Published to coincide with a major exhibition of the same name, My Country features the work of over 130 artists around Australia and makes an important contribution to writing on Aboriginal art. Interviews with exhibiting artists highlight their experiences and approach to art practice, while essays by respected writers Hetti Perkins, Brenda L Croft, Glenn Iseger-Pilkington and Bruce McLean provide insights into the connections Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists have with land and country. Arranged according to the exhibition’s themes — my country, my history, my life — this publication is rich in imagery, ideas and narrative.

Publishing details: Brisbane : Queensland Art Gallery/ Gallery of Modern Art, 2013. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 192, illustrated.

de Nemes Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August, 2019, vol 41, no, 3, p13 - 29, ‘The ‘Paris Studio’ of George de Nemes’, article by Dr Rob La Nauze
Lyon, Cottier & Co., stained glass artistsview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August, 2019, vol 41, no, 3, p30-42 ‘Lyon, Cottier & Co., stained glass artists’, article by Andrew Montana
Lyon John Lamb view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August, 2019, vol 41, no, 3, p30-42 ‘Lyon, Cottier & Co., stained glass artists’, article by Andrew Montana
Cottier Danielview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, August, 2019, vol 41, no, 3, p30-42 ‘Lyon, Cottier & Co., stained glass artists’, article by Andrew Montana
Early Australian Town Viewsview full entry
Reference: Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Ref: 2
Eyre John view of Sydney Cove 1804view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
prints colonialview full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Eyre John views of Sydney Cove 1810view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Troedel Charles 1835-1906 4 Melbourne views c1864view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Huggins W J Hobart Town 1830view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Lloyd H G Hobart Town c1857 ‘a protege of Conrad Martens’view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Lloyd H G Hobart Town c1857 ‘a protege of Conrad Martens’view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Huggins W J Swan River 1827view full entry
Reference: see Early Australian Town Views, A distinguished collection of high quality prints in full colour and limited editions. Includes reproductions of 14 colonial prints with some information on each of the original prints. (A promotional booklet by Avon Prints, Suite 4 Bridge House. 127-129 Walker Street, North Sydney.)
Publishing details: Avon Prints, 16pp [1970s?] 16pp
Writing Artview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Timms Peter contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Ford Gwen contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Jackman Hilary contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Clode Danielle contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Lucas Helen contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Evans Megan contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Crowle Christine contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Boddy Janet contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Jenkins John contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Trembath Tony contributor to Writing Art - includes biographyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds) [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Wakefield Johnview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Ben-Meir Judithview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Bowen Deanview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Hook Peterview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Bateman Piersview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Armfield Davidview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Amor Rickview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Sinclair Lesleyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Wright Dougview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Boddy Janetview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Pryor Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Wadelton Davidview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Nedelkopoulos Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Leti Brunoview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
French Leonardview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Baldessin Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Begg Julieview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Williams Williamsview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Kahans Jillview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Margocsy Paulview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Carrigy Peterview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Croyer-Pederson Margoview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Martin Alanview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Armstrong Brianview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Page Markview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Henderson Onaview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Hook Peterview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Moynihan Danielview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Kossatz Lesview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Robb Kenview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Smart Sallyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Young Johnview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Wei Guanview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Murray Janview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Baigent Simon Icarusview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Edgoose Markview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Skipper Myraview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Szonyi Stefanview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Williams Lizview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Kahans Jillview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Aitken-Khunen Helenview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Venables Prueview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Dall’Ava Augustineview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Delves Robertview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Stoner Markview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Jackman Hilaryview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Wegner Peterview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Kelly Williamview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Cowcher Joseph Scottview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Lincioln Kevinview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Cavell Paulview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Danko Aleksview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Burrt Cliffview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Fries Ernestview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Bird Terriview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Skipper Marcusview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Bodycomb Helen and Enver Camdalview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Camdal Enver and Bodycomb Helen view full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Halpern Deborah with Malcolm Laurenceview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Laurence Malcolm with Halpern Deborah view full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Ginger Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Smith Cathyview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Kumar Naomi and Susie Kumarview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Baines Robertview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Marks Chrisview full entry
Reference: see Writing Art: A Series of Essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection by Barb Whiter, & Chris Marks (eds). A work by the artist is illustrated and there may be biographical or other information. [’Contains six essays on the Nillumbik Art Collection. At the time of writing the collection consisted of 167 works valued at one million dollars. ‘]
Publishing details: Nillumbik Shire Council, Greensborough, Victoria, 2006. Pictorial Wraps. , 129pp
Brisbane artistsview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Queensland artists view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Fairweather Ian p134-54 etcview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Churcher Bettyview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Churcher Royview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Collinson Laurence numerous referencesview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Cottew Vera 197-202, 215view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Fullbrook Sam p137view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Grant Gwendolyn p46, 85view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Harwood Gwen taught art bt Vera Cottewview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Hope Laurence p78, 118. 123, 127-8view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Lahey Vida numerous referencesview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Lindsay Norman p10, 41view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Miya Studio p122-8 etcview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Molvig John numerous referencesview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Olley Margaret view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Rigby John p112, 118, 135view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Rees Lloyd p26, 189, 191view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Roggenkamp Joyview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Sibley Andrewview full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Tucker Albert p39, 61view full entry
Reference: see The Third Metropolis: Imagining Brisbane Through Art and Literature 1940-1970 by William Hatherell, Foreword by Thomas Shapcott. Includes endnotes, bibliography, plus index. "For the first time, The Third Metropolis places Brisbane within wider debates about Australian cultural history."

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland, 2007. 312pp
Anderson Walter J (1868 - 1956)view full entry
Reference: Walter J Anderson (1868 - 1956) exhibited at the Victoria Arts Society.
Lungley Dorothyview full entry
Reference: with Day Fine Art, July, 2019: Deep Blue Sea c1930
Dorothy Lungley
10 cm x 14 cm. Colour woodcut
Possibly a print exhibited in Melbourne in 1932 Everman’s Library on 332 Collins street. The exhibition included 15 colour prints by Lungley, one titled,  At the Bottom of The Deep Blue Sea’ other works by Allan Jordan were in the exhibition.
The Age – Tuesday 29th November 1932- page 5 Art Notes
Scott Ericview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art: Eric Scott
Born: 1893, Bega, NSW
Died: 1978, USA
After a stint in the Australian Armed forces, Scott studied at the Sydney Art school. In 1920 he went to Paris to seek a new environment and subjects to draw and etch. Whilst there he meet a Mrs Davenport of the American women’s club who was arranging an exhibition of etchings. He exhibited several at the Old Salon and one of his etchings was bought for the collection of the Chicago Art Institute.
Scott was a wonderful draftsman and was described by ‘Art In Australia, edition 18, December 1st 1926’ as having “good knowledge of his medium and a free manner of drawing”.
Scott signed much of his work with a Kangaroo monogram, Indicating that although he lived and worked abroad he wanted his work to be recognised as Australian.
Magenta Emmaview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art: Emma Magenta. Outsider. Artist. Author. Director
Emma Magenta was born in Sydney and began her career drawing and writing her thoughts down on brown paper bags whilst working at a book shop in Paddington. After pinning the illustrative thoughts to the front window, they began to be noticed and revered. Soon she was offered a publishing deal, and her creative career began.
She has gone on to write and illustrate several adult picture books, mostly dealing with aspects of the female Psyche, and illustrate books for other prominent creatives such at Toni Collette.
Emma uses her left hand to paint and draw, as a way to tap into the present unconscious mind. Her works are created as an exercise of personal and public alchemy, dealing with contemporary issues associated with being human!
Emma Magenta’s works are held in collections all over Australia and the world.
Hawthorne Dore or Heliodoreview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art: Heliodore, also known as Brendorah or ‘Dore’  Hawthorne, was a modernist Painter born in Sydney on the 31 August 1895, ninth child in a family of 10.
In 1920-21 she enrolled at Julian Ashton’s Sydney Art School as an evening student while supporting herself by working as a designer of patterns in an embroidery factory during the day. Her teachers at the school included Grace Crowley and Anne Dangar.
A promising student, she was quickly promoted from the Antique to the Life Class. The 1920s were exciting years, with knowledge of overseas developments in art filtering back to Australia. Dore was an early member of the Art Students’ Club, formed in 1923 as a forum for discussion of new art trends. In 1925 she and Nancy Hall established Undergrowth: A Magazine of Youth and Ideals , which came out bi-monthly until its demise in 1929. Dore’s November-December 1927 cover shows a woman watching a man at an easel (ill. Butler, SBD , 8).From humble beginnings Undergrowth became the voice of modernism in Sydney. During this time Dore also attended Roland Wakelin’s drawing and painting classes.
Like many women artists of her generation Dore Hawthorne never married. Unlike many others, however, she had no independent means of support and lived frugally. She possessed a strong social conscience and was particularly interested in C.H. Douglas’s economic theory of Social Credit, which stated that mal-distribution of wealth was the cause of economic depressions and had led the world into a long series of wars.
In the mid-1930s she obtained a position teaching art at Frensham School in Mittagong but found the routine stifling and left after several years (cf. Ruth Ainsworth ). About this time she built a cottage for herself in the Burragorang Valley, northwest of Sydney, an area in which she had made many walking trips with friends. Soon after the outbreak of World War II she applied for a job at the Lithgow Small Arms Factory, which manufactured Bren guns. She painted her Factory Folk series under the pseudonym ‘Brendorah’, conflating her name and the gun that dominated her life.
When her employment was terminated in April 1945 she returned to Sydney.
In Sydney Dore ‘lived with excruciating frugality, great creative energy and a Spartan spirit’ and this may have contributed to her collapse in 1968. Afterwards she lived in a convalescent home in Manly until her death on 23 July 1977. Nancy Hall wrote in a tribute to her friend in 1978:
Dore felt the ugliness of materialism and pollution as keenly as she felt everything that was fine and beautiful and much of her painting and writing was a great cry of protest.
 
Brendorah or Hawthorne Dore or Heliodoreview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art: Heliodore, also known as Brendorah or ‘Dore’  Hawthorne, was a modernist Painter born in Sydney on the 31 August 1895, ninth child in a family of 10.
In 1920-21 she enrolled at Julian Ashton’s Sydney Art School as an evening student while supporting herself by working as a designer of patterns in an embroidery factory during the day. Her teachers at the school included Grace Crowley and Anne Dangar.
A promising student, she was quickly promoted from the Antique to the Life Class. The 1920s were exciting years, with knowledge of overseas developments in art filtering back to Australia. Dore was an early member of the Art Students’ Club, formed in 1923 as a forum for discussion of new art trends. In 1925 she and Nancy Hall established Undergrowth: A Magazine of Youth and Ideals , which came out bi-monthly until its demise in 1929. Dore’s November-December 1927 cover shows a woman watching a man at an easel (ill. Butler, SBD , 8).From humble beginnings Undergrowth became the voice of modernism in Sydney. During this time Dore also attended Roland Wakelin’s drawing and painting classes.
Like many women artists of her generation Dore Hawthorne never married. Unlike many others, however, she had no independent means of support and lived frugally. She possessed a strong social conscience and was particularly interested in C.H. Douglas’s economic theory of Social Credit, which stated that mal-distribution of wealth was the cause of economic depressions and had led the world into a long series of wars.
In the mid-1930s she obtained a position teaching art at Frensham School in Mittagong but found the routine stifling and left after several years (cf. Ruth Ainsworth ). About this time she built a cottage for herself in the Burragorang Valley, northwest of Sydney, an area in which she had made many walking trips with friends. Soon after the outbreak of World War II she applied for a job at the Lithgow Small Arms Factory, which manufactured Bren guns. She painted her Factory Folk series under the pseudonym ‘Brendorah’, conflating her name and the gun that dominated her life.
When her employment was terminated in April 1945 she returned to Sydney.
In Sydney Dore ‘lived with excruciating frugality, great creative energy and a Spartan spirit’ and this may have contributed to her collapse in 1968. Afterwards she lived in a convalescent home in Manly until her death on 23 July 1977. Nancy Hall wrote in a tribute to her friend in 1978:
Dore felt the ugliness of materialism and pollution as keenly as she felt everything that was fine and beautiful and much of her painting and writing was a great cry of protest.
 
Warren Guyview full entry
Reference: From The Saturday Paper, Aug 3, 2019 as "The artist as an old man - A visit to the studio of nonagenarian artist Guy Warren.’ By Sarah Price.

Artist Guy Warren
At the end of a long driveway off a busy road in Sydney’s north, you reach his studio first. It’s in the garage: brown brick, ’70s style, flat-roofed carport off the front. At the door is an arrow pointing to his house. The house is set behind, like an afterthought. He prefers the studio: most days he is out here, painting.
The ceiling is panelled with timber, the air acrid with turpentine. Drawings and paintings are tacked on every wall space. There are palettes smeared with colour, canvases leaning against tables, tins and hats, memorabilia from New Guinea, an old cassette player. Brushes in every size and shape hang from hooks on a wall. Lined in rows on timber shelves are his sketchbooks, dating back to the 1940s. The metal spirals of the sketchbooks are rusted, cloth covers faded or frayed, and the pages browning. Against the far wall is an antique sideboard covered with art books and papers, and a birthday card with red lettering that reads: What do you wish a 96-year-old? The card is a few years old now. In May this year Guy Warren turned 98.
“How did that happen?” he says, shaking his head and laughing. He wears a purple shirt and reading glasses hanging from a cord around his neck. “It is extraordinary. I don’t know where it’s gone. When I was 95 I realised that I was perhaps getting old, but at 98… It’s absurd.”
At his age, Guy tells me, there is more time to think. When you can no longer look very far ahead you start looking back, thinking about the other things you might have done but will never get the chance to do. ‘‘I could certainly have done some things better. You only get one chance … sometimes you stuff it up and sometimes you don’t. The things you are proud of still stand firm, but inevitably of course – this sounds like an old man – one wonders how worthwhile they were. Does it really matter? Not just art, but everything.”
What does matter at 98? “Working still, making things. I don’t like the word creating: it is one of those pompous words. Making things, doing things…” Guy never doubted he would always be drawing and painting. He left school during the Depression, at age 14, worked at a newspaper and became interested in words and drawings. The newspaper’s art editor took him by the hand up Sydney’s George Street to an art school. It changed his life. He took as many art classes as he could afford and drew whenever he could. He started illustrating and writing for magazines. At 21 he joined the army and went to New Guinea, taking a sketchbook. “I lost my 20s to the war and my young 30s were in London. I’ve known the Alice for a long time – hitchhiked there in 1940, sleeping rough all the way. Ever since I was a small boy I have walked in the landscape. I know the Australian landscape pretty bloody well. I’ve slept on every square inch of it.
“One wants to make a mark – I don’t mean a mark in society. Literally making a mark I suspect is a primal urge. When some man or woman picked up a stick from a fire and made a mark on a cave wall – it started from there. At the same time it is the most abstract of things and the most human of things. On one hand it means no more than ‘this is a mark’, and on the other hand it means ‘I am here, I am alive, I am human. Perhaps there are other people also like me here.’ ”
Guy has another studio in Leichhardt, storing an accumulation of 80 years’ worth of work. In the collection is a self-portrait he did at 18, and the paintings he made at art school, after the war. He is currently working from notes he took in Alice Springs last year, but, he says, a painting can start with anything – not necessarily notes or a drawing. “I still browse through my sketchbooks occasionally, but I don’t have to do that. My art is less realistic now than it was many years ago, but I was brought up in that realist tradition. I get my ideas from landscape, from people. Sometimes things are no more than ideas … it’s a strange business.
“The creative process becomes much more difficult with age. I suspect that is because you know a lot more, or you expect a lot more. You know how short of your expectations you are falling. It’s not anxiety in relation to what other people think – you’ve reached a point where it doesn’t matter a stuff any longer, frankly. It is freeing, but you still have the same doubts. We all suffer from great doubts, which is why I paint over things constantly, and why I have been advised many times to leave them alone … but they’re not quite right, and you think you can do better. There is no yardstick, no God-given voice to say, ‘Stop now.’ There are no rules, so you keep trying – uncertain as you are – you keep trying.
“It is not that one makes a decision to paint, be an artist, to make things. It is a dumb urge that you know you have to do. I know artists in Sydney and they don’t start painting until they have a deadline. That’s not what making art is. Art is getting up in the morning and knowing you have to do it. For what reason? I have no idea. You just have to start making marks. Writers get up at 6 o’clock and make words and musicians write music. Among certain people it is essential to make something that you can either hear or look at.”
For 80 years Guy has been asking himself: What is the role of an artist? “I think the job of an artist is to be inventive, to be curious, to take risks. I don’t want to paint the same bloody painting year after year. I’d rather be broke than do that.”
He calls me honey. I don’t mind: he’s 98. He says he wants to go north, into the desert, to make marks. He wants to play jazz with a group of guys. He could have been a muso, a writer. He says there are too many things he wants to learn, too many things he wants to do. He wants another 50 years, then another 50 after that.
This article was first published in the print edition of The Saturday Paper on Aug 3, 2019 as "The artist as an old man".
Hagan Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Hagan’s Images of Australia
Publishing details: International Art Services, 1994. Illusts. in colour. (illustrator). 4to.or.cl, hc, (96pages). First and only edition.
Hagan Robertview full entry
Reference: see Bluethumb Gallery website: ‘Robert was born in 1947 in Murwillumbah, NSW and graduated with an Arts degree in Economics and a Diploma in Education from Newcastle University. He is one of Australia's best known and accomplished impressionist painters. His artistic presence is firmly established in the United Kingdom and America. Widely travelled with studios in Suffolk (England), San Diego (USA), Southport (Australia) and Pattaya (Thailand). Robert's paintings have been featured in the International Fine Art Collector (1992 and 1994). He was awarded the America's Cup International Artist Gold Medal and the coveted Mystic Yachting Award in 1995. Robert's rise to International fame began in the Perth where he had a sell out exhibition and met the America's Cup Team which went on to make Australian Yachting history. This led Robert to move to San Diego in 1991 to paint the American's Cup battle and publish his second of several books of Australian paintings. In 1995 he again painted the Cup Race and won the prestigious Mystic International maritime painting competition. By that time Robert had established a firm presence in select U.S. galleries. About this time he had two more books published which led to his incredibly successful career in the U.S.A Robert gave seminars on painting and judged art competitions in Los Angeles and appeared on TV talk shows here and there. He worked between Australia and the U.S.A with galleries in Carmel, Boston, Aspen and Vail doing particularly well. Robert extended his paintings to the Thompson Galleries in London. Apart from authoring several books Robert threw his hat into film making and successfully produced a TV Series for Discovery HD called 'A Splash of Colour'. He is renowned for his Outback horse scenes, full of action and unique Romantic paintings which are held in numerous corporate and private collections worlwide.(PLEASE NOTE ONLINE SALES ONLY AVAILABLE THROUGH BLUETHUMB)’
Hagan Robertview full entry
Reference: see artist’s website: ‘I’ve been pushing paint around for about 30 years and still enjoy every moment of it- so its still a hobby I guess. My boyhood was spent exploring the rainforests of the Tweed Valley in Australia while stepping around snakes that basked in the midday sun. School was as little bookwork as possible and moments of unconsciousness on the football field. A 16 hour steam train trip to the ‘big smoke’ and 4 years later I graduated from University with a bit of knowledge about history, economics and drinking. Painting started about the same time as I started working and it increasingly challenged the latter as the most relaxing and rewarding way forward. It finally took over and traveling the world followed. A number of great relationships later, 2 fabulous boys and painting in USA, the UK and Asia and the years slipped by. A few books about painting then a glancing shot at a TV series and I’m here!’
Leak Billview full entry
Reference: Trigger Warning - Deplorable Cartoons by Bill Leak. [’Bill Leak's daily cartoons in The Australian newspaper have been variously described as the works of a genius and Australia's most insightful and thought-provoking arbiter of the main story of the day. Thumbing through Trigger Warning, a collection of Bill's cartoons from 2016, it's easy to argue that those terms have t been used loosely. When one of the cartoons is this collection prompted the Human Rights Commission to take action under law 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, it sparked a national debate on free speech, the right to laugh and the right to offend. While one side of the Leak brain was outraged at this action, the other side saw it as manna from heaven. He used the ensuing debate to defend his rights through more brilliant cartoons, most featuring the Human Rights Commission's Gillian Triggs and Tim Soutphommasane, the main protagonists in the case brought against him. Bill was eventually justified when the case was withdrawn, sparking yet ather hilarious (and jarring) cartoon to wind up the issue. In true cartoonist style, he had the first and last laugh while bringing a taboo issue (in this instance the demeaning behaviour of many Indigeus men in remote Aboriginal communities) to national prominence. Sparking debate while making people laugh is what he does best and that's why he's a nine-time Walkley Award winner. Trigger Warning features a host of other insights on the stories of the day, covering a wide range of political and cultural topics and key moments from the year that was. They're all in the unique Leak style - beautifully drawn and coloured, with erudite, telling word bubbles - and when thumbed through in a bound collection, offer a humorous and thought-provoking take on 2016, from the demise of Labor attack dog Sam Dastyari, through to the introduction of the Safe Schools program, the election of Donald Trump, and onto the death of Fidel Castro. And, they're all drawn without fear or favour. As 2017 unfolds with the US on tenterhooks, the UK post-Brexit, refugee hordes flooding into Europe, the Middle East being the Middle East, China making inspection tours of the South Seas and a rogue Senate in Australia, the rights to laugh and offend might be the best way ahead. For a cartoonist like Bill, all bad news is Bleak.
Author Biography: Bill Leak was Australias best-known and most controversial cartoonist as well as an acclaimed artist and writer. A frequent finalist in the Archibald Prize, Bills portraits hang in Parliament House and the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra and his cartoons have appeared in newspapers and magazines throughout Australia and around the world. He is the daily editorial cartoonist on The Australian.’]
Publishing details: Wilkinson Publishing, 2017, pb, 160pp
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: Carnival in Suburbia. The art of Howard Arkley by John Gregory. ‘When he died suddenly in Melbourne in July 1999, at the age of 48, Australian painter Howard Arkley had just achieved his greatest successes, receiving international critical acclaim for his work at the Venice Biennale and in Los Angeles. Arkley enjoyed pop themes and imagery, like many of his ‘postmodern’ generation, but he also developed an idiosyncratic individual style, using heavy, air-brushed lines and vivid colour to produce stylised representations of everyday subjects. Carnival in Suburbia covers Arkley’s work thematically, beginning with his best-known works of suburban imagery. Subsequent chapters examine his fascination with pattern, colour and line; a full account for the first time of his creative use of source material; and his collaborations with Juan Davila and other contemporaries. Finally, Arkley is identified as a ‘carnivalesque’ painter, intrigued by death, grotesque body imagery and masks. John Gregory, an art-historian by profession, was Arkley’s brother-in-law.’ – the publisher

Publishing details: Melbourne : Cambridge University Press, 2006. Folio, illustrated boards with acetate dustjacket (slight chip to head of spine), pp. 214, extensively illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Black Stuartview full entry
Reference: Still life Stuart Black, by Craig Judd.
Scarce monograph on the painter Stuart Black (1937 – 2007), prominent member of the gay community and pioneer of Melbourne’s leather scene.
Publishing details: Melbourne] : Trustees of the Estate of Stuart Alan Black, 2012. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 84, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Bergner Yoslview full entry
Reference: RUBIN, Carmela
Yosl Bergner : a retrospective by Carmela Rubin.

Publishing details: Tel Aviv : Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 2000. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 294, illustrated, text in Hebrew and English.
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: Arthur Boyd and the exile of the imagination
Touring exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Canberra : National Gallery of Australia, 1999. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp.12, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: John Brack

Publishing details: Melbourne : Tolarno Galleries, 1983.
Ref: 1000
Clinch Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Clinch. Fanfare for the common man
Essay by David Thomas, interview by Julie Collett.
Publishing details: Ballarat : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2013. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, pp. 108, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Bott G Wview full entry
Reference: G. W. Bot. Field of glyphs
Text by Jason Smith.
Publishing details: London : Hart Gallery, c. 2009. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 32, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Brew-Bevan Peterview full entry
Reference: Shoot : studio sessions
“This is a very personal selection of approximately 47 celebrity photographic portraits taken by Peter Brew-Bevan. The book begins with introduction which outlines Peter Brew-Bevan’s career as both fine artist and photographer, and places his work in context. The portraits section follows. Nearly all the subjects are well-known celebrities (Australian and international) working in sport, film, literature, music, television, theatre and fine arts. Each finished portrait is accompanied by a short description summarising the shoot brief, the evolution of the concept, events on the day and post production notes. Also for every portrait there are accompanying reproductions/ facsimiles of Peter Brew-Bevan’s handwritten journals that outline the concept for the shoot, the styling, lighting set-up, his interaction with the artist, which include sketches and tearsheets from magazines etc. that inspired him in creating the portrait. The book is highly illustrated, features tip-ins on transparent film, and journal pages that appear on distinctive pages that differ in size and stock from the larger portrait pages.” (Trove)

Publishing details: Sydney : Murdoch Books, 2007. Folio (33 x 36 cm), illustrated cloth boards, pp. 392, colour illustrations throughout.
Ref: 1000
Adams Tateview full entry
Reference: Tate Adams - Diary of a vintage. The work cycle of the year 1979 at Wynns Coonawarra estate in South Australia. Depicted in twenty-six wood engravings and text by Tate Adams. With an Introduction by David Wynn.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Lyre Bird Press, 1981. Small quarto, gilt-lettered burgandy cloth in matching slipcase, pp. xvi; 42; (2), illustrated with original wood-engravings by Tate Adams.Limited to 375
Ref: 1000
Ciccarone Juliaview full entry
Reference: Julia Ciccarone : fictitious voyages, 7 May 1991 to 1 June 1996
Exhibition catalogue, with introduction by Robert Lindsay and biographical notes on the artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Robert Lindsay Gallery, 1996. Quarto, blue illustrated wrappers, [pp. 24], colour illustrations throughout.
Ref: 1000
Annett-Thomas Karen view full entry
Reference: Out of winter : Karen Annett-Thomas
Catalogue of works with essay by visual artist Robyn Burgess.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Bendigo Art Gallery, 2015. Quarto, grey wrappers, pp. 24, some colour illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Boston Paulview full entry
Reference: Paul Boston : works on paper 1982 – 1986
Catalogue of 49 works featuredinthe exhibition. Includes a loose note  from Vivian Anderson of Deutscher Gallery drawing attention to lot number 5 (Wall 1983).
Publishing details: [Melbourne : Deutscher Gertrude Street, 1988]. Quarto, folding card, 3 pages, illustrations of 15 works.
Ref: 1000
Cartwright Michaelview full entry
Reference: Cartwright
Text by Joan Swift, 5 works illustrated.
Publishing details: [Australia : C & N Studios, 199?]. Quarto, illustrated folding card, 3 pages.
Ref: 1000
Bromley Davidview full entry
Reference: David Bromley : recent works 2004
Exhibition catalogue of 35 works from the “Holly” collection.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Scott Livesey Art Dealer, 2004. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 69, colour illustrations throughout.
Ref: 1000
Dall’Ava Augustineview full entry
Reference: Journey : the sculpture of Augustine Dall’ava 1975 – 2008
Publishing details: McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park, 2009. Quarto, pictorial wrappers, pp. 52, colour illustrations and pictures throughout. Features an essay by Penny Teale and a catalogue of works.
Ref: 1000
Crawford Marianview full entry
Reference: Memory Work. A contemporary photobook created by Melbourne artist Marian Crawford, drawing on her memories growing up on Babana, or Ocean Island (contemporary Kiribati) and using historical photographs of what was at the time known as the Gilbert and Ellice Islands.

Publishing details: [Melbourne : the artist, 2018]. Artist’s book. Octavo (21cm tall), self-wrappers, blue cellophane dustjacket, pp. [48], printed letterpress, relief and intaglio. Unique edition.
Ref: 1000
Arnold Rayview full entry
Reference: Raymond Arnold - Body Armour : Char Corps, essays by Katherine McDonald
Publishing details: Mt. Nelson [Tasmania] : Partners Press, c 2005. Octavo, embossed card wrappers, folding sheet in 15 sections each with an illustration. A fine artist’s private press book limited to 250 copies signed by the artist and the designer.
Ref: 1000
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: Exhibition of pictures. Will Ashton, R.O.I. At David Jones’ George Street Store November 1936
Publishing details: Sydney : David Jones’, 1936. Octavo, lettered wrappers, pp. 8, foreword by Lionel Lindsay, catalogue of 67 works with prices, two black & white reproductions of Ashton’s paintings and one black & white reproduction of a photograph of Ashton
Ref: 1000
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of an exhibition of oil paintings by Will Ashton, foreword by Lionel Lindsay, catalogue of 69 works with prices, two colour and two black & white reproductions
Publishing details: Painted on his recent tour in Europe, held in the galleries of Anthony Hordern & Sons Ltd. Sydney : Anthony Hordern & Sons Ltd, 1925. Quarto, lettered wrappers, pp. 8,
Ref: 1000
Bergner Yoslview full entry
Reference: Yosl Bergner. Paintings : 1955-1975 text in English and Hebrew. Illustrated in colour and black and white
Publishing details: Tel Aviv : The Tel Aviv Museum, 1975. Square octavo, illustrated wrappers,
Ref: 1000
Bergner Yoslview full entry
Reference: Yosl Bergner : Paintings of Flowers May-June 1979, text in English and Hebrew, illustrated in colour and black and white
Publishing details: Tel Aviv : Bineth Gallery, 1979. Square octavo, illustrated wrappers,
Ref: 1000
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: Exhibition of French and Italian landscapes by Will Ashton, June 2nd to 14th, 1927, held at The Fine Art Society’s Gallery, foreword by Lionel Lindsay written in Monaco 1927, catalogue of forty-two works with prices,
Publishing details: Melbourne : The Fine Art Society’s Gallery, 1927. Octavo, lettered yellow wrappers, pp. 8, two black & white reproductions of Ashton’s work,
Ref: 1000
Banfield Elizabethview full entry
Reference: At Jupiter Creek (letters 9-12) Handmade book with black cloth covered board ends measuring 230 x 185 mm. The work becomes a concertina-fold diorama consisting of a folded sheet of rag paper with six illustrated panels.
Publishing details: [Melbourne: the artist, 2009]. Artist’s book. Edition 2/3, signed, titled and dated 2009 in pencil.
Ref: 1000
Brennan Angelaview full entry
Reference: Angela Brennan. Peas cooked the Roman way

Publishing details: Melbourne : Niagara Gallery, 2004. Quarto, half-cloth over laminated boards (lightly rubbed); pp. [28]; illustrated. 
Ref: 1000
Anderson Sueview full entry
Reference: ANDERSON, Sue and HARRISON, Gwen
Howl for a black cockatoo, designer binding of black kangaroo inlaid with etching by Sue Anderson and Wayne Stock, etched endpapers, pp. [28], each leaf being printed letterpress and with sugarlift or aquatint etching, some leaves folding and some shortened. Limited to 25 copies
Publishing details: Sydney : Impediment Press & Wand'Ring Bark, 2015. Folio (540 mm tall),
Ref: 1000
Stock Wayneview full entry
Reference: see ANDERSON, Sue and HARRISON, Gwen - Howl for a black cockatoo, designer binding of black kangaroo inlaid with etching by Sue Anderson and Wayne Stock, etched endpapers, pp. [28], each leaf being printed letterpress and with sugarlift or aquatint etching, some leaves folding and some shortened. Limited to 25 copies
Publishing details: Sydney : Impediment Press & Wand'Ring Bark, 2015. Folio (540 mm tall),
Christofides Andrewview full entry
Reference: CHRISTOFIDES, Andrew; MAHFOUZ, Naguib - Passage, being quotes from Mahfouz accompanied by an original watercolour by Christofides, housed in a clamshell box. Limited to 30 copies signed by the artist plus 6 hors commerce. This is number 7 of 30. A stunning artist's book, showcasing Christofides' artistic response to the sensitive writings of the Egyptian Nobel Laureate. 


Publishing details: Melbourne and Townsville : Lyre Bird Press & Zimmer Editions, 2005. Folio, lettered wrappers, 10 folded leaves, including title sheet and colophon sheet, 8 sheets
Ref: 1000
Swallow Rickyview full entry
Reference: BAKER, Alex; HOLTE, Michael Ned
The Bricoleur. Ricky Swallow

Publishing details: Melbourne : NGV, 2009. Octavo, cloth, pp. 88. illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: Drysdale in Albury
Catalogues 30 works, 21 of which are by Drysdale with the remainder by artists Geoffrey Mainwaring, George Browning, Donald Friend, and Elaine Haxton.
Publishing details: Albury : Albury Regional Art Centre, 1985. Oblong octavo, pictorial wrappers, [8pp].
Ref: 1000
Banfield Elizabethview full entry
Reference: Shyness
Artist’s book. Edition 2/3, signed, titled and dated 2013 in pencil. Handmade red cloth-covered boards measuring 105 x 85 mm with concertinafold rag paper fastened to the boards, hand-stitched with linocut illustrations of leaves and overlaid with further linocut designs. When opened, the book can either be extended in linear fashion or folded back upon itself to produce a wheel or star. The artwork deliberately conceals decorative elements from instant view to reflect the themes of veiling and concealment and the pursuit of beauty.  This complex paper construction is meticulously executed by hand and housed in a folding card box with string ties.
Elizabeth Banfield was born in the U.K. in 1963 and arrived in Australia in 1966. She received her Bachelor of Fine Art degree from the University of South Australia in 1984, majoring in printmaking. From a series of initial student exhibitions in Adelaide in the 1980s she went on to exhibit in national printmaking exhibitions in Melbourne, Adelaide, and New South Wales. Her print commission for the Print Council of Australia in 2010 quickly sold out, and she was a finalist at the important Libris Awards (Australian Artist Book Prize) at Artspace Mackay in 2013. Banfield is represented in various gallery collections including Burnie Regional Art Gallery, Monash University, South Australian School of Art, Tweed River Art Gallery and the Print Council of Australia. She is also represented in the artist book collection of the State Library of Queensland. 

Ref: 1000
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: Round trip by Miles Little
Illustrated by Russell Drysdale.
Publishing details: Melbourne University Press, 1977. Octavo, gilt-illustrated leather in paper dustjacket, pp. 54, illustrated. Limited to 150 copies signed by Drysdale and Little. 
Ref: 1000
Charapanovskaia Marinaview full entry
Reference: Charapanovskaia, Marina (1961 - )
Black Box. Artists' book, four canvas boxes with folding sides and ribbon ties measuring 105 mm2; 70 mm2; 55 mm2; and 45 mm2, each containing a concertina folded paper artwork, being a series of photomontage of semi-abstract designs. Limited to 4 copies.
In this work, the artist creates the enigma of the unknown, what shape, content or format will be contained within these mysterious black boxes?
Marina Charapanovskaia was born in Krasnoyarsk in Eastern Siberia in 1961, and grew up in Vorkuta in the Komi Republic, far northern Russia. She studied art at the People's University, Moscow 1982 – 1984 and spent the rest of the decade working in design for government departments, including designing powerful Soviet propaganda posters. Upon the breakup of the Soviet Union,  Charapanovskaia emigrated to Melbourne where her grandmother had been living since the 1960s. She returned to study and completed her Bachelor of Fine Arts (Printmaking) at the Victorian College of the Arts (Melbourne University).  Since then she has participated in numerous group and solo exhibitions, and won awards from the Kingston City Arts Centre and National Gallery Women's Association.
 

Publishing details: Melbourne : the artist, c. 2000.
Ref: 1000
Billeter Walterview full entry
Reference: BILLETER, Walter (1943 - )
Australian novemberies
(Included in the seminal exhibition 'Artists books : bookworks', Ewing Paton Gallery, 1978)
Publishing details: Melbourne : Paper Castle mimeographs, 1979. Octavo, printed wrappers, pp. 48, [4],
Ref: 1000
Davies Julian view full entry
Reference: Julian Davies - A pile of hair

Publishing details: Sydney : Finlay Press, 2003. Octavo, printed wrappers in card clipcase, unpaginated. The standard edition, one of 150 copies signed by the author and artists. Charapanovskaia
Ref: 1000
Braund Dorothyview full entry
Reference: Dorothy Braund: a survey
Survey exhibition 1949-1974. May 29th to June 26th, 1994.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Eastgate Gallery, 1994. Quarto, lettered wrappers, unpaginated, illustrated in colour,
Ref: 1000
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: Anatomy of a relationship by Lawrence Daws.
illustrated with nine colour images. Includes text by P.A.E. Hutchings.
Publishing details: Brisbane : [Johnstone Gallery, 1972]. Quarto, pictorial wrappers trifold card,
Ref: 1000
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: “The 1913 mining disaster” : paintings by Lawrence Daws.

Publishing details: Brisbane : [Johnstone Gallery, 1970]. Quarto, pictorial wrappers (minor rubbing on rear wrapper), trifold card, illustrated with two large colour reproductions. Includes price list.
Ref: 1000
Browne Abdrewview full entry
Reference: Andrew Bowne - Apparition 2012

Publishing details: Photopolymer intaglio. Edition: 20. Image size: 200 mm x 150 mm. Paper size: 285 mm x 255 mm; image created by the artist and printed by APW printer Simon White at APW, Melbourne. 2012
Ref: 1000
Charapanovskaia Marinaview full entry
Reference: Ropes.
Artists' book, oblong folio (155 x 475 mm) bound in raw silk with ribbon tie, plain endpapers, 8 folded leaves printed with 14 original etchings, each signed and numbered, interlined with tissue. Limited to 4 copies.
In this exquisite book the artist explores the textural qualities of something as simple as fibre ropes remembered from her childhood, demonstrating an adept artistic talent in creating fine detail and organic movement in the series of 14 etchings which explores her subject.
Marina Charapanovskaia was born in Krasnoyarsk in Eastern Siberia in 1961, and grew up in Vorkuta in the Komi Republic, far northern Russia. She studied art at the People's University, Moscow 1982 – 1984 and spent the rest of the decade working in design for government departments, including designing powerful Soviet propoganda posters. Upon the breakup of the Soviet Union,  Charapanovskaia emigrated to Melbourne where her grandmother had been living since the 1960s. She returned to study and completed her Bachelor of Fine Arts (Printmaking) at the Victorian College of the Arts (Melbourne University).  Since then she has participated in numerous group and solo exhibitions, and won awards from the Kingston City Arts Centre and National Galery Women's Association. 
A fine contemporary artists' book from a migrant to Australia drawing upon her memories of childhood.

Ref: 1000
Banfield Elizabethview full entry
Reference: From the Red Box
Artist’s book. Edition 2/5, signed, titled, numbered and dated 2010 in pencil. Handmade book with bronze cloth covered board ends measuring 155 x 157 mm. The work folds out concertina-style, revealing the hand-crafted pages inside. The work becomes a concertina-fold diorama consisting of a folded sheet of rag paper with six illustrated panels. Each of the panels features hand-cut linocuts in the shape of leaves which are hand-stitched onto the paper with coloured cotton. This intricate paper construction stretches to approximately 1260mm. It combines vibrantly coloured Japanese papers with the artist’s fine linocuts.
Collections: held in The State Library of Queensland
Elizabeth Banfield was born in the U.K. in 1963 and arrived in Australia in 1966. She received her Bachelor of Fine Art degree from the University of South Australia in 1984, majoring in printmaking. From a series of initial student exhibitions in Adelaide in the 1980s she went on to exhibit in national printmaking exhibitions in Melbourne, Adelaide, and New South Wales. Her print commission for the Print Council of Australia in 2010 quickly sold out, and she was a finalist at the important Libris Awards (Australian Artist Book Prize) at Artspace Mackay in 2013. Banfield is represented in various gallery collections including Burnie Regional Art Gallery, Monash University, South Australian School of Art, Tweed River Art Gallery and the Print Council of Australia. She is also represented in the artist book collection of the State Library of Queensland. A full CV is available upon request. Douglas Stewart Fine Books, 2019.

Ref: 1000
Grahame Noreenview full entry
Reference: GRAHAME, Noreen and DAVIS, Jan
The case of the extremely glad gallerist [with] The case of the extremely sad gallerist
pair of flipbooks showing with the universally recognised symbol of a red sticker what really motivates the feelings of a commercial gallery director. Each limited to 200 signed and numbered copies. A fun and direct contemporary pair of artists' books. 
Publishing details: Brisbane : Numero Uno publications, 2001. 24mo, printed wrappers, each 24 leaves,
Ref: 1000
Davis Janview full entry
Reference: see GRAHAME, Noreen and DAVIS, Jan
The case of the extremely glad gallerist [with] The case of the extremely sad gallerist
pair of flipbooks showing with the universally recognised symbol of a red sticker what really motivates the feelings of a commercial gallery director. Each limited to 200 signed and numbered copies. A fun and direct contemporary pair of artists' books. 
Publishing details: Brisbane : Numero Uno publications, 2001. 24mo, printed wrappers, each 24 leaves,
Wright George Pview full entry
Reference: Brisbane and Environs Illustrated: Twelve Views of the Scenery of the City and Neighbourhood. [From Douglas Stewart Fine Books: Second Series … [Contents …] Photographed by Geo. P. Wright, Creek Street, (Opposite the Union Bank) Brisbane. MDCCCLXXVIII. At head of title: Under the Patronage of His Excellency the Governor. Brisbane : George P. Wright [printed by Cleghorn & Co.], 1878. Oblong folio, original half morocco over brown cloth boards with gilt lettering (boards marked and scuffed, corners worn, head of spine frayed), original marbled endpapers, title page printed in red and black (loss at upper right corner), [12] leaves of thick card, recto of each with a mounted albumen print photograph, 210 x 280 mm, centred within a printed purple border bearing the imprint of G.P. Wright, Photo. to His Excellency / Creek Street, Brisbane, and with a printed caption outside the lower border, all interleaving intact, versos blank, the albumen prints with slight yellowing but in very good condition, the leaves clean and with a minimal amount of pale foxing. Extremely rare.
The title page indicates that this edition of Wright’s Brisbane and Environs Illustrated is part of a second series. The only other recorded example of this series is held in the collection of the State Library of Queensland (examples of the first series, issued around 1875, are held in the State Library of Queensland, National Library of Australia and State Library of New South Wales). However, neither album is known to Holden (Holden, Robert. Photography in colonial Australia : the mechanical eye and the illustrated book), whose bibliography cites 130 Australian works to use original photographs that were published between 1865 and the early 1890s. Brisbane and Environs Illustrated is an album of major significance, not only for the early photographic record of Brisbane which it provides, but also for the fact that it represents a substantial example of the early photographically illustrated book in Australia.
The photographer George Parkinson Wright was active in Brisbane between 1874 and 1883. He is known for a large-scale panorama of Brisbane from New Farm, showing the serpentine course of the Brisbane River, taken around 1875, and his technical prowess was recognised in his appointment as official photographer to the Governor of Queensland. In 1878, the year in which Brisbane and Environs Illustrated was published, Wright moved from his Fortitude Valley studio to new premises in Creek Street.
The titles of the twelve views in the present album are:
On the River – at Milton / Brisbane – from Wickham Terrace, No. 1 / Portion of a Cattle Run / The River – Garden Reach, from St. Mary’s Church / Interior of the Legislative Council Chamber / Weeping Willow and Bamboos – Botanic Gardens / Brisbane – from the Milton Road / Government House and Grounds, with the Parliamentary Buildings / Brisbane – from Wickham Terrace, No. 2 / The Road through the Scrub – near Beaudesert / Queen Street, Brisbane / Cultivation on the River – from South Brisbane.’]
Ref: 1000
Ashton Julian essay byview full entry
Reference: see ‘An Aim for Australian Art’ in the Centennial Magazine, 1 August, 1888, essay reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Hopkins Livingstone essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay by Mrs Charles Bright in Cosmos, 30 March, 1895, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Mahony Frank essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay by A. G. Stephens in Bookfellow, 23 March, 1899, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Taylor George essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay on Taylor in All About Australians, 1 December, 1902, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Taylor George caricatures essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay on Taylor in Steele Rudd’s Magazine April 1905, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
May Phil essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay in Our Swag, 22 December, 1905, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
May Phil in Sydney essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay in The Bulletin, 22 December, 1905, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Dyson Edward essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay in The Lone Hand, 1 August, 1912, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Lindsay Norman essay onview full entry
Reference: see essay in The Lone Hand, 1 August, 1912, reproduced in The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Journals in Australiaview full entry
Reference: The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
magazines in Australiaview full entry
Reference: The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
newspapers in Australiaview full entry
Reference: The Colonial Journals: and the emergence of Australian literary culture, by Ken Gelder, Rachael Weaver [’Colonial Australia produced a vast number of journals and magazines that helped to create an exuberant literary landscape. They were filled with lively contributions by many of the key writers and provocateurs of the day – and of the future. Writers such as Marcus Clarke, Rolf Boldrewood, Ethel Turner and Katharine Susannah Prichard published for the first time in these journals.

In The Colonial Journals, Ken Gelder and Rachael Weaver present a fascinating selection of material: a miscellany of content that enabled the ‘free play of intellect’ to thrive and, matched with wry visual design, made attractive artifacts that demonstrate the role this period played in the growth of an Australian literary culture.

The Colonial Journals also includes 50 colour image plates of the journal covers, including Colonial Monthly, Australian Women’s Magazine and Domestic Journal, Sydney Quarterly Magazine, Cosmos, Bulletin, and New Idea for Australian Women.’]
Publishing details: UWA, 2014, pb, 240pp
Field of Visionview full entry
Reference: Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Ref: 139
Bond Chrisview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Browne Andrewview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Hammond Kirrilyview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Hearman Louiseview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Johnson Matthewview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Kennedy Helenview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Langlois Chrisview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Langlois Chrisview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Lloyd Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Logue Joannaview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Marburg Amandaview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Moss Damianview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Stevens Kateview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Tomescu Aidaview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Wolfhagen Philipview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Wolfhagen Philipview full entry
Reference: see Field of Vision, Shepparton Art Gallery, Monash University Museum of Art Melbourne 2003. Curated by Louise Tegart and Karen Hall. Includes essays and biographical information on the artists.
Publishing details: Shepparton Art Gallery, 2003, pb, edition of 500
Huntley Brendanview full entry
Reference: Any Day Now, exhibition by Brendan Huntley
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2019
Ref: 1000
Inked - Australian Cartoons view full entry
Reference: ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Alston Deanview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Armstrong Mickview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Cotton Herbertview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Cross Stanview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Dyson Andrewview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Dyson Willview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Fazzari Roccoview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Gibbs Mayview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Gill Samuel Thomasview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Golding Mattview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Green William Ellisview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Hartt Cecil Lview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Hopkins Livingstoneview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Horacek Judyview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Jackson A Lview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Kudelka Jonview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Leak Billview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Leunig Michaelview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Lind Rubyview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Lobbecke Ericview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Low Davidview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Lynch Regview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Martin Matthewview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
May Philview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Mercier Emileview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Minns B Eview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Moir Alanview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Molnar Georgeview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Nicholson Peterview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
O’Neill Wardview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Pope Davidview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Pryor Geoffview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Rowe Davidview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Scorfield Tedview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Schofield Ted misspelt, should be Scorfieldview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Seymour Robertview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Spooner Johnview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Sprod Georgeview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Tandberg Ronview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Wilcox Cathyview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Wyatt Williamview full entry
Reference: artist included in the exhibition ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
cartoonsview full entry
Reference: see ‘Inked - Australian Cartoons’ by Guy Hansen. Catalogue published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the National Library of Australia from 7 March 2019 to 21 July 2019. There is some biographical information throughout the catalogue but artists are not given biographical entries. [’Cartoons can give us a pictorial history of Australia in a series of cartoon ‘time capsules’; they often hold a mirror up to Australian society. This book shows how cartoonists helped develop a visual vocabulary for Australian life and culture—whether it is ‘The Little Boy from Manly’, a larrikin digger or Tony Abbott’s red speedos.
Inked: Australian Cartoons presents a selection of thought-provoking cartoons from the National Library of Australia’s extensive archive, covering topics from the First Fleet to the present day. The book shows readers the breadth of Australia’s cartooning history, from historic subjects such as convict life, the goldfields, early royal visits and Ashes crickets tests, through the cartoon greats such as Will Dyson, Bruce Petty, Michael Leunig, to contemporary cartoons by significant artists such as David Pope, Jon Kudelka, Judy Horacek, Cathy Wilcox and David Rowe.
Inked shows how the role of cartoonists has shifted from illustrator to commentator, skilfully capturing the controversial topics of the day. Author Guy Hansen shows how whether it be post-war politics and the demise of the Labor government, capital punishment, the Vietnam War, Indigenous affairs or changing relationships with Britain and Asia, nothing has escaped our skilled cartoonists’ satirical pens.’] 
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
xiii, 141 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Farewell Cinderellaview full entry
Reference: Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Western Australian artview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Perth artview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Linton James W R p178-9 etcview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Pitt Morrison George view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Gibbs Herbert in passingview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Williams Frederick Matthews in passingview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Currie Jane Eliza p174view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Williams Fred p 174-5 visitview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Davila Juan p 174 visit in 1986view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Grey-Smith Guyview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
de Sainsonview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Lesueurview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Campbell Johnview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Campbell Johnview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
O’Connor Kateview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Landells Floraview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Southern Murielview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Missingham Halview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Rossi Daisyview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Fuller Florenceview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Temple-Poole George architectview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
White Duncan McGregorview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
van Raalte Hview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Nicholas Royview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Webb Archibald Bertramview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Rees Leslieview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
McKinley Miguel 1896-1958view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Bennett Portiaview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Vike Haraldview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Heap Amyview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Poignant Alexview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Oldham Johnview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Oldham Rayview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Ebert Max pseud.view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
McClintock Herbertview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Francis Irisview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Hall Florenceview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Johnson Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Blumann Eliseview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Taylor Howardview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Hunt Ivorview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Foulkes-Taylor David designerview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Minc Salecview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Gibbons Tomview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
McKay Brianview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
PICAview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
ARXview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Vizents Allenview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Stannage Miriamview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Jones Davidview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Morse Garethview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Juniper Robertview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Tjapaltjarri Clifford Possumview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Tjapaltjarri Possum Clifford view full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Jagamarra Michael Nelsonview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Thomas Roverview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Moore Maryview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Blanchflower Brianview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Pantjiti Mary McLeanview full entry
Reference: see Farewell Cinderella : creating arts and identity in Western Australia / edited by Geoffrey Bolton, Richard Rossiter, Jan Ryan. Includes bibliographical references. Some biographical references.
Publishing details: Crawley, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 2003 
346 p., [8 p. of plates] : ill., includes index.
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: The Inside World - Contemporary Memorial Poles from Aboriginal Australia. By: by Henry Skerritt (Author), Sally Salvesen (Editor), Howard Morphy (Contributor), Diana Nawi (Contributor), Kimberley Moulton (Contributor) [to be indexed]
This groundbreaking book focuses on contemporary memorial poles, one of the most unique forms of contemporary Aboriginal Australian art.

Traditionally used in Aboriginal funeral ceremonies, memorial poles have been transformed into compelling contemporary artworks. The memorial pole is made from the trunk of the Eucalyptus tetradonta, hollowed naturally by termites. When the bones of the deceased were placed inside, it signified the moment when the spirit had finally returned home--when they had left the "outside" world, and become one with the "inside" world of the ancestral realm. Today, these works of art have become a powerful symbol of Aboriginal culture's significance around the globe. The artists featured in the book--including John Mawurndjul, Djambawa Marawili, and Nyapanyapa Yunupingu--are some of Australia's most acclaimed contemporary artists. Taking their inspiration from ancient clan insignia, the designs on these poles are transformed in new and personal ways that offer a powerful reminder of the resilience and beauty of Aboriginal culture. This book features dazzling color images and impeccable scholarship and includes essays from some of the leading scholars in the field of Aboriginal art.


Publishing details: Copublished by the Nevada Museum of Art, the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia, and DelMonico Books, 2019, 160pp
Ref: 1000
Song Spiralsview full entry
Reference: Song spirals : sharing women's wisdom of Country through songlines / Gay'Wu Group of Women ; Laklak Burarrwana, Ritjilili Ganambarr, Merrkiyawuy Ganambarr-Stubbs, Banbapuy Ganambarr, Djawundil Maymuru, Sarah Wright, Sandie Suchet-Pearson, Kate Lloyd. [to be indexed]
'We want you to come with us on our journey, our journey of songspirals. Songspirals are the essence of people in this land, the essence of every clan. We belong to the land and it belongs to us. We sing to the land, sing about the land. We are that land. It sings to us.' Aboriginal Australians are the longest surviving human culture on earth, and at the heart of Aboriginal culture is song. These ancient narratives of landscape have often been described as a means of navigating across vast distances without a map, but they are much, much more than this. Songspirals are sung by Aboriginal people to awaken Country, to make and remake the life-giving connections between people and place. Songspirals are radically different ways of understanding the relationship people can have with the landscape. For Yolngu people from North East Arnhem Land, women and men play different roles in bringing songlines to life, yet the vast majority of what has been published is about men's songlines. Songspirals is a rare opportunity for outsiders to experience Aboriginal women's role in crying the songlines in a very authentic and direct form.
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Crows Nest, NSW : Allen & Unwin, 2019 , ©2019
Ref: 1000
Australia's first naturalistsview full entry
Reference: Australia's first naturalists : indigenous peoples’ contribution to early zoology / Penny Olsen and Lynette Russell
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : NLA Publishing, [2019] 
©2019 
223 pages : illustrations (some colour), maps, portraits
Ref: 1000
Hall Fionaview full entry
Reference: Subject to change / Fiona Hall
Publishing details: Adelaide : Experimental Art Foundation ; Annandale, N.S.W. : Piper Press, 1995 
1 v. (unpaged) : ill. ;
Ref: 1009
Baily Henry Hall photographerview full entry
Reference: represented in NGA with Aboriginal portraits c1866
Woolley Charles photographerview full entry
Reference: represented in the NGA with Aboriginal portraits
Australian landscape designersview full entry
Reference: Australian landscape designers / portraits by Nicholas Watt ; profiles by Chris Pearson
Publishing details: Sydney, NSW : Bauer Media, 2019 
346 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
landscape designersview full entry
Reference: Australian landscape designers / portraits by Nicholas Watt ; profiles by Chris Pearson
Publishing details: Sydney, NSW : Bauer Media, 2019 
346 pages : colour illustrations
Gab Titui Indigenous Art Award 2008view full entry
Reference: Gab Titui Indigenous Art Award 2008
Ref: 1000
Nambara Artview full entry
Reference: Nambara Art by Jeanne arnold and Barbara Philp with
Ref: 1000
Thompson Christianview full entry
Reference: see MCA website: Christian Thompson
Born 1978, Gawler, South Australia. Lives and works Oxford, United Kingdom. Bidjara people.
Christian Thompson’s work explores identity, cultural hybridity and history. Using sculpture, performance, photography, video and sound he explores sexuality, gender, race and memory through performances and conceptual self-portraits. Thompson made history when he became the first Aboriginal Australian to be admitted to the University of Oxford in 2010. Thompson has exhibited widely nationally and internationally. Selected solo shows include Polari, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2014); Pagan Sun, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2013); We Bury Our Own, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2012); King Billy, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2011); Heat, Chalk Horse Gallery, Sydney (2010); Lost Together, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2009); Australian Graffiti, Gallery Gabrielle Pizzi, Melbourne (2008); and The Sixth Mile, Chalk Horse Gallery, Sydney (2007).
Selected group exhibitions include Contemporary Indigenous Art in Australia: The Sordello Missana Collection, Valencian Institute of Modern Art, Valencia, Spain (2012); Close Encounters: The Next 500 Years, Plugin Institute of Contemporary Art, Canada (2011); The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a Precarious Age, 17th Biennale of Sydney (2010); Culture Warriors: National Indigenous Art Triennial, American University, Washington DC, USA (2009); Schittering-Brilliance, Aboriginal Art Museum, Utrecht, The Netherlands (2007); and Terra Incognita, Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces, Melbourne (2006).
Thompson’s work is held in numerous collections nationally and internationally, including major state and regional galleries in Australia; the Aboriginal Art Museum, Utrecht, the Netherlands; and Wagner-Owen Collection, North Carolina, USA.
Blanchflower Brianview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Blanchflower Cathyview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Fardin Galliianoview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Kirwan-Ward Jeremyview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Leslie Andrewview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Richards Trevorview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Spremberg Alexview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Vickers Trevorview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Wiebke Karlview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Wolfgramm Lisaview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Wybraniec Jurekview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Western Australian artview full entry
Reference: see: In Abstract - form and essence in recent Western Australian painting (11 artists. Includes biographies)

Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2002,
Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award 2008view full entry
Reference: Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award 2008

Publishing details: South Brisbane, Qld. : Queensland Art Gallery, 2008
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award 2008

Publishing details: South Brisbane, Qld. : Queensland Art Gallery, 2008
Pambegan Arthur Koo'ekka Jrview full entry
Reference: Arthur Koo'ekka Pambegan Jr : walkan-aw and kalben
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill
Ref: 1000
Western Australian indigenous Art Awardsview full entry
Reference: Western Aust indigenous Art Awards, 2009 and other years?

Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Western Aust indigenous Art Awards, 2009 and other years?

Post-hybridview full entry
Reference: Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Abdullah Abdul-Rahman view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Arkeveld Hans view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Fardin Galliano view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Nannup Laurel view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Pease Christopher view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Christanto Dadang view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Connelly-Northey Lorraine view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Croft Brenda view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Gertsakis Elizabeth view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Mellor Danie view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Presley Ryan view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
Siwes Darren view full entry
Reference: see Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self. This publication supports the exhibition 'Post-hybrid : reimagining the Australian self' 5 June - 6 September 2015. “Post-hybrid: reimagining the Australian self” features work by WA artists Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Hans Arkeveld, Galliano Fardin, Laurel Nannup and Christopher Pease.
Works by Australian artists Abdul Abdullah, Dadang Christanto, Lorraine Connelly-Northey, Brenda Croft, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Danie Mellor, Ryan Presley and Darren Siwes also feature in the exhibition.

Publishing details: Bentley, Western Australia : John Curtin Gallery, Aug. 2015 
©2015 
15 pages : colour illustrations
I want changeview full entry
Reference: I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Ref: 1000
Andrew Brookview full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Agzarian Michael view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Begg Zanny view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
boat-people.org view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Cole Bindi view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Dodd James view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Foley Fiona view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Jamin view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Keating Ash view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Kelly Deborah view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
McLennan Azlan view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
MEEK view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Rudd Van view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Scrase Carl view full entry
Reference: see I WANT CHANGE: Two decades of artistic defiance, disapproval and dissent.’ [’A shadowy figure sits cross-legged against a wall. Hands outstretched, he holds a placard above a beggar’s cup, scrawled with the text, “KEEP YOUR COINS, I WANT CHANGE.” MEEK’s iconic stencil, Begging for Change, sums up a sentiment that experienced a groundswell in contemporary art practice in Australia during the Howard era and has maintained an active presence to the current day. The War on Terror, our treatment of refugees, the environment, Indigenous identity and the GFC have each figured prominently as political issues that have occupied artists and their practices over the past 15 years. I Want Change takes a snapshot of these issues and the often public, performative and socially engaging working embraced by artists to voice their protest, criticism and concern.’]
Publishing details: Latrobe University Gallery, Australia, 20 February – 12 April, 2013
Beevors Michele view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Lofts Pamela view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Neil Anne view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Fitzmaurice Melanie view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Bradley Jacqueline view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Bowak Rachel view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Scheuerle Simon view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Lewis Owen view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Pratt Louis view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Lucas Noelene view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Serisier Camilleview full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Bliss Joel view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Kochel Jay view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Stuart Amandaview full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Van der Mark Peter view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Simic Anna view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Gilbert Cristy .view full entry
Reference: Making Tracks - An exhibition by alumni from the ANU School of Art Sculpture Workshop. 17 artists inclded
Publishing details: ANU, 2013,
Allen Davidaview full entry
Reference: Davida Allen : survey exhibition, 24th October-5th December 1987 / edited by Annette Hughes ; photography, David Sandison. Catalogue essay by Atherton Nye. Bibliography: p. 72.
Publishing details: Brisbane : Museum of Contemporary Art, 1987 
74 p. : ill. (some col.),
Roet Lisaview full entry
Reference: Lisa Roet : finger of suspicion : McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park 10 October - 5 December 2004 / Lisa Roet. Catalogue of an exhibiton held at the McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park 10 October - 5 December 2004.
Catalogue essay by Penny Teale.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Langwarrin, Vic. : McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park, 2004 
1 folded sheet (8) p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see Urban focus: Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander art in urban areas of Australia
Publishing details: ANG, 1994, 8p. col. ill.

Baker Nyukana (Daisy)view full entry
Reference: Nyukana (Daisy) Baker : a retrospective / [exhibition curated by Diana Young] [’Baker was born in November 1943, after her Pitjantjatjara parents came to the newly established Ernabella Mission, and she is probably the first indigenous woman to spend her entire working life making a living as a professional artist. Features works that span Baker's entire career, including batik, paintings, ceramics, floor rugs, prints, childhood drawings, wood carving, basketry and bead work.
Notes Essay by Diana Young.
Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporray Craft and Design, Adelaide, 1 August-6 September, 2009.’]

Publishing details: Adelaide : Jamfactory Contemporary Craft And Design, 2009 
23 p. : col. ill., col. ports
Ref: 1000
Siwes Darren view full entry
Reference: Darren Siwes : Dalabon Biyi / Dalabon Dalok : 21 Septembber - 16 October 2011
by Siwes, Darren, 1968-

Publishing details: Kent Town, S. Aust : Greenaway Art Gallery, 2011
Ref: 1000
Siwes Darren view full entry
Reference: Darren Siwes : Mum, I want to be brown
by Siwes, Darren, 1968-

Publishing details: Adelaide : Greenaway Art Gallery, 2006
Ref: 1000
Siwes Darren view full entry
Reference: Mis/perceptions, May 2001 / Darren Siwes
by Siwes, Darren, 1968-

Publishing details: Adelaide : Greenaway Art Gallery,
Ref: 1000
Siwes Darren view full entry
Reference: Darren Siwes - Just is
Publishing details: Nellie Castan Gallery 2005
Ref: 1000
Austin Daryl view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Barbour John view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Bezor Annette view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Bradley Matthew view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Collett Annabelle view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Cornish Tracy view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
crowEST Sarah view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Cumpston Nici view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Hall Fiona view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Hassan Ariel view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Iacobelli Aldo view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Nikou Michelle view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Scarce Yhonnie view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Sleeman Deborah view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
Valamanesh Hossein .view full entry
Reference: see Uneasy : recent South Australian art : an exhibition / by Timothy Morrell. Catalogue of the exhibition held 20 June-17 Aug., 2008, at the Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia, [2008] 
47 p. : col. ill.
In yer faceview full entry
Reference: In yer face: the Bald Archy Prize / Peter Batey & Fran Henke. The Bald Archy Prize. Australia's best loved and only satiric portrait prize. Judged by a sulphur-crested cockatoo named Maude.
Notes ""The exhibition that gets people into galleries they've never been in before" - The Canberra Times"
Publishing details: Hastings, Victoria: Flying Pony Press, [2015] 77 pages : colour illustrations, plates
Ref: 1000
Bald Archy Prizeview full entry
Reference: see In yer face: the Bald Archy Prize / Peter Batey & Fran Henke. The Bald Archy Prize. Australia's best loved and only satiric portrait prize. Judged by a sulphur-crested cockatoo named Maude.
Notes ""The exhibition that gets people into galleries they've never been in before" - The Canberra Times"
Publishing details: Hastings, Victoria: Flying Pony Press, [2015] 77 pages : colour illustrations, plates
portraits in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see In yer face: the Bald Archy Prize / Peter Batey & Fran Henke. The Bald Archy Prize. Australia's best loved and only satiric portrait prize. Judged by a sulphur-crested cockatoo named Maude.
Notes ""The exhibition that gets people into galleries they've never been in before" - The Canberra Times"
Publishing details: Hastings, Victoria: Flying Pony Press, [2015] 77 pages : colour illustrations, plates
Wooley Charles A (1834-1922)view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
Charles A. Wooley (1834-1922) worked from a studio in Macquarie Street Hobart from 1859 to 1870 and is perhaps best known for his photographic portraits of the last surviving Tasmanian Aborigines exhibited in 1866 at the Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition. His photo portrait of William Lanne, the last surviving full-blood male Tasmanian Aborigine, records him at about age twenty-six. Lanne died in 1869 and his body was desecrated in the name of medical science. Similarly, he photographed Truganini who on her death in 1876 was long thought to be the last surviving full-blood Aboriginal Tasmanian.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Lindt John William (1845 -1926) view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
John William Lindt (1845 -1926) was born in Frankfurt Germany and as a boy seeking adventure ran off to sea as a seventeen-year-old. He deserted ship in Brisbane before making his way down the coast to Grafton on the Clarence River where he found employment in a photographic studio. In 1867 he returned to Germany briefly but was soon back in Australia to buy out his former employer’s photography business. In 1875 and 1876 Lindt staged atmospheric studio shots of the local Aborigines from the Clarence River District which he mounted and sold as album collections. In 1876 he relocated to Melbourne finding fame in 1880 when he photographed the capture of the notorious ‘Kelly Gang.’ Lindt was honoured in 1885 with the role as the official photographer on a Government Expedition to New Guinea before going on to photograph the New Hebrides in 1890 and Fiji in 1892. Unfortunately, his studio business succumbed to the great financial depression that rocked the Australian colonies in 1893 and he ‘retired’ to a new property ‘the Hermitage’ he had built at Blacks Spur. He died there in 1926 in the catastrophic bushfires that engulfed his property.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Ehlers Carl (active 1880s) view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
Carl Ehlers (active 1880s) was another German-born photographer who chose Prince Street Grafton to set up a photography studio. But, unlike Lindt’s staged studio shots, Ehlers concentrated more on capturing the actual life circumstances of the Aborigines preferring to record them in their natural environment or in camp settings. His photographs are a truer representation of the dispossession of the native population when forced to live on the cusp of civilisation.
Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Foelsche Paul (1831- 1914)view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
Paul Foelsche (1831- 1914) was born near Hamburg Germany and migrated to South Australia in 1854 perhaps drawn by the lure of gold. However, instead of racing off to the Victorian Goldfields like so many others he instead signed up to become a State Trooper bringing him into contact for the first time with the local Aborigines for whom it was said he have developed an affinity. He was an exceptional police officer and in 1869 he was transferred to Palmerston in the Northern Territory as the sub-Inspector of the Northern Territory Mounted Police rising to Inspector in 1876.
Foelsche understood the difficulties of applying British justice to the native population and undertook ”a systematic study of Aboriginal customs and language. On 2 August 1881 his authoritative paper, ‘Notes on the Aborigines of North Australia’, was read to the Royal Society of South Australia.” (ADB)
Perhaps acknowledging that “a picture paints a thousand words” Foelsche embraced the new art of photography and by 1873 he was recognised as the leading photographer in the Northern Territory. He drew critical praise for ethnographic photographs of the Territory’s Aboriginal tribes even receiving a gold watch from the German Kaiser as a reward for his photography.
However, historical revisionists have unearthed chilling accounts of the heavy-handed justice he meted out on the native population and so his staged portrait shots of Aborigines, who sit stony-faced, appear more menacing when viewed through a more critical lens. In one photograph on offer you can clearly see that the subject is manacled.
At the turn of the 19th Century two of Sydney’s most prolific photographic studios were run by Charles Kerry and Henry King, who in tandem set out to capture with their lens ethnographic portrait studies of Australian Aborigines in the field and in staged studio shots.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Kerry Charles (1858 -1928)view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
Charles Kerry (1858 -1928) started out in photography in a carte-de-viste business in Sydney specialising in scenic views of rural and urban Australia. He went on to establish Kerry & Co. in 1892 and by the late 1890s had become the eminent photographic studio in Sydney. By 1910 his studio was Australia’s largest publisher of postcards which although they were produced in commercial quantities have become iconic collectables through the years. His 1908 photographs of the Burns v Johnson World Heavyweight Boxing Match at Sydney’s Rushcutters Bay brought him International acclaim, but it is his studio portraits of Aborigines and their rites of passage that are his emblematic works. These studies were produced from the 1890s through to 1917.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
King Henry (1855-1923)view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
Henry King (1855-1923) was an infant when he emigrated to Australia in 1857 with his parents. He was apprenticed to the Sydney photographer J. Herbert Newman before going on to establish his own studio in partnership with William Slade in 1879.  King was acclaimed as a portrait and landscape photographer realising International recognition with a Bronze Medal for Photography at the 1893 Chicago ‘World’s Fair.’ Like Kerry, King was fascinated with the visage of the Australian Aborigine and travelled New South Wales and Queensland in search of subjects to photograph.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Tyrrell James (1875-1961)view full entry
Reference: from Smalls Auctions Bulletin - Sale 47
Reflections of a Dark Past, emailed 13.8.2019:
James Tyrrell (1875-1961) was a Sydney based publisher and bookseller whose customers included Henry Lawson and Norman Lindsay. The American authors Mark Twain and Robert Louis Stephenson are also known to have frequented Tyrrell’s Bookshop when visiting Sydney. In 1914 Tyrrell opened a bookshop at 143 Castlereagh Street, Sydney that also included a museum that housed his eponymous collection of Australiana.
Tyrell acquired over 6,500 glass negatives from the ‘Kerry’ and ‘King’ studios on their closure along with their working stock of sepia prints. As well as selling the sepia prints he had acquired, Tyrell used the glass negatives sparingly in the 1920s and 30s to produce black and white reprints which were also offered for sale in his bookshops. The business moved several times through the years and so it is possible to date the reprints from the Company stamps on the back.
The glass negatives were eventually purchased by Consolidated Press who donated them to the Powerhouse Museum where they are held today.
Smalls Auction Sale 47 offers a truly outstanding compilation that records the dire circumstance of the Australian Aborigine.

Smalls Auction Sale 47 will go online on Friday 16th August offering a rare photographic history of Australia’s Indigenous population spanning the years 1866 to 1917.  Most are ethnographic portrait studies taken in studio settings or ‘in situ’ by some of the leading Australian photographers of their day. Names such as Wooley, Lindt, Ehlers, Foelsche, Kerry and King set out to capture the essence of the Australian Aborigine for a scientific as well as voyeuristic clientele. The photographs of Kerry and King were distributed to a far broader audience by the publisher James Tyrell who purchased the glass negatives and working stock of their studios on their closure selling reprints of their works through his various bookshops.
Publishing details: Smalls Auctions
452 Oxford St
Paddington, NSW 2021
Australia

Nhon Le Thanhview full entry
Reference: see Austlit website: Le Thanh Nhon i(4 works by) Born: 1940 Vietnam ; Died: 2002 Melbourne, Victoria, make, Heritage: Vietnamese.
Le Thanh Nhon was a major Vietnamese sculptor and established an international reputation while still in his 20s. He lectured in fine arts at Saigon universities. When Saigon fell in 1975, he and his family fled by boat and were granted asylum in Australia. Nhon became a tram conductor in Melbourne, and also illustrated children's books. He also continued sculpting. Nhon's tram conductor's uniform and his art have been on display at the National Gallery of Australia. Hung Le [comedian] is his son.
Le Thanh Nhon view full entry
Reference: see Nhon Le Thanh
Nhon Le Thanhview full entry
Reference: Life with Past Images : Personal Accounts by Eight Vietnamese Settlers in Australia Cuộc đời với bóng dáng xưa Nguyen Xuan Thu (editor), Le Thanh Nhon (illustrator), Jacquie Hickman (translator),
Publishing details: Coburg : Phillip Institute of Technology , 1986
Ref: 1000
Nhon Le Thanhview full entry
Reference: My Village Làng tôi Le Thao , Le Thanh Nhon (illustrator),
Publishing details: Victoria : Vietnamese Language and Culture Publications for Committee for the Preparation of Vietnamese Reading Materials , 1984
Ref: 1000
Nhon Le Thanhview full entry
Reference: The Season of the Flamboyant Flower : A Childrens' Reader Mùa hoa phượng Thị Hương Trần , Le Thanh Nhon (illustrator), Jacquie Hickman (translator),
Publishing details: Coburg : Vietnamese Language and Culture Publications for Committee for the Preparation of Vietnamese Reading Materials , 1985
Ref: 1000
Nhon Le Thanhview full entry
Reference: The Last Train Journey Le Thao , ( illus. Le Thanh Nhon )
Publishing details: Pascoe Vale South : Vietnamese Language and Culture Publications for Committee for the Preparation of Vietnamese Reading Materials , 1984 children's fiction children's
Ref: 1000
Gregory Alfredview full entry
Reference: Alfred Gregory - A Life In Photography
Aug 26, 2019, Gibsons Auction catalogue. Over 400 lots of photographs by the artist.
ONLINE CATALOGUE

Alfred Gregory
A Life in
Photography
26th August 2019

Level 1, 885-889 High Street
Armadale, Victoria 3143

Auction
26 August 12pm


Alfred Gregory (Greg) 1913–2010 – FBIPP Hon FRPS climber, explorer and photographer was born in Blackburn, Lancashire UK. During the Second World War he served as an officer in the Black Watch in North Africa and Italy.
 
In 1952 he was with Shipton’s Cho Oyu expedition in Nepal and in 1953 he was chosen as a climbing member of the British team, led by John Hunt, which made the first ascent of Mt Everest where he reached 8500 metres in support of the Hillary and Tenzing successful summit attempt. He was also the official stills photographer for the expedition.
 
Throughout the 1950s he led several expeditions: in Nepal, to Rolwaling and the Gauri Shankar massif where 19 new peaks were climbed and a plane table survey made, and to Ama Dablam; to Distigil Sar, Karakoram, in Pakistan: to the Cordillera Blanca in Peru.
 
Although wanting to study art he started life as a printer but art influences remained important throughout his life. He was greatly inspired by Japanese prints and admired Hokusai and Hiroshige’s use of colour and shape on a two dimensional canvas. He loved working in black and white and felt strongly that colour pictures should not be black and white images with added colour and that colour should be used creatively.
 
For over 50 years Greg worked as professional photojournalist and he loved shooting the people of the world. For him mountains were merely a backdrop to their lives and he never thought of himself as a landscape photographer. For 20 years he worked freelance for Kodak UK presenting up to 60 lectures each winter throughout Britain and Europe, illustrated with Kodachrome transparencies.
 
He spent a lifetime travelling on photographic assignments to most countries of the earth and his pictures and classic photo essays were published worldwide.
 
His work has been exhibited throughout Britain, Europe, America, Africa and Australia and galleries and private collectors hold his photographs.
 
For more than 25 years with his wife Sue, also a photographer, he planned and operated Photographic Holidays and Treks to remote regions of the earth. In 1996 he came to live in Australia and became an Australian citizen
Publishing details: Gibsons Auction , Aug 26, 2019,
Ref: 1000
Lonergan Peter view full entry
Reference: from Museum of Sydney website, exhibition: Making Australian Modernism: Architecture
Sun 22 Oct,, 2017:
Peter Lonergan (B Sc Arch, B Arch, M Benv) architect and one of the directors of Cracknell & Lonergan Architects.
Cracknell & Lonergan was established in 1984 as a multi-disciplinary architecture and design practice. Through the development of the practice they are increasingly concerned with the conservation of cultural heritage and the sustainment of the environment, practicing these principals in their work. Alongside their commitment to Aboriginal Reconciliation.
The directors of the company are Peter Lonergan (B Sc Arch, B Arch, M Benv) and Julie Cracknell (B Sc Arch, B Arch, M Benv). Peter Lonergan is the Nominated Architect (NSW Registration No. 5983), a member of the Australian Institute of Architects and on the Heritage Conservation Committee of the AIA.
The company currently employs 10 staff and associates and specialises in a number of fields including: Heritage Architecture, design, restoration and analysis; Exhibition Design; Architecture, including work ranging in scale from small residential alterations and additions through to medium density residential, commercial and community work; Environmental Design; Town Planning and Landscaping Design; and Artistic Collaborations.
Lassen Catherine view full entry
Reference: from Museum of Sydney website, exhibition: Making Australian Modernism: Architecture
Sun 22 Oct,, 2017:
Catherine Lassen is an architect and Senior Lecturer in architecture at the University of Sydney. Her research is concerned with modern architectural history and its interconnections with contemporary practice. Writing and curating exhibitions on Australian architects such as Glenn Murcutt and Hugh Buhrich over a number of years, she has engaged with their projects via a focus on architectural drawings.
Wheeler Toneview full entry
Reference: from Museum of Sydney website, exhibition: Making Australian Modernism: Architecture
Sun 22 Oct,, 2017:
Tone Wheeler is an architect, author, educator and consultant with an abiding interest in environmentally sustainable design (esd) in the mid seventies. At the University of Sydney he designed and coordinated and assisted in the construction of the ‘autonomous house’, a working example of a low energy house constructed entirely from recycled materials. Upon graduation he worked for the Australian government in Canberra where he designed a range of low cost social housing that won the R.A.I.A Residential Design Award (C S Daley Medal) in 1980. For the last twenty years he has worked as an architect in his own practice and has won numerous awards and competitions. He has been on the faculty of 3 universities and is a frequent speaker at architectural conferences and seminars.
Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibitionview full entry
Reference: Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Ref: 1000
Messih Spence view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Retallick Sara view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Rich Roberta Joy view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Alexandra Spence view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Baker Tiyan view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Bryant Kieran view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
McGrath Callum view full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Olivier-Gargano Laetitiaview full entry
Reference: see Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship Exhibition - Eight emerging Australian artists will be given the opportunity over the course of August to showcase their works at the renowned UNSW Galleries thanks to the Freedman Foundation Travelling Scholarship For Emerging Artists.
Each year the scholarship is awarded to artists to aid with the costs of international travel as they research and develop their own individual artistic styles. This year’s exhibition will feature new works or iterations of works from eight of the countries brightest young talents; Spence Messih, Sara Retallick, Roberta Joy Rich, Alexandra Spence, Tiyan Baker, Kieran Bryant, Callum McGrath and Laetitia Olivier-Gargano.
Through a range of media including sound, sculpture, video and photography, the artists’ works explore an array of themes often reflecting on their personal relationship to sites and cities visited as part of their Scholarship program.
From discomfort and the uncanny, transgender, queer and gender-variant histories, slavery and race relations, to how death and intimate acts are mediated in the internet age, the works demonstrate a deep consideration of the global landscape and our place within it.

Publishing details: UNSW Galleries, 2019,  Cnr Oxford Street and Greens Road, Paddington
Manietta Siegfried view full entry
Reference: The Australian environment : landscape as art & inspiration. photographs by Siegfried Manietta ; [essays by Ian Lowe, Michele Helmrich and Maurice Ortega ; design and artwork, Imants Jaunitis]
Publishing details: T&G Publishing, 2011, 1 volume (unpaged) : colour photographs
Ref: 1000
Woolnough Meredith view full entry
Reference: Organic Embroidery. [’Renowned textile artist Meredith Woolnough creates replicas of nature using a delicate system of tiny stitches. Her artwork is breathtaking,and now for the first time Woolnough offers crafters and fiberartists a lesson in how to use the "organic embroidery" technique. Look behind the scenes of her art process, from the initialfieldwork sketching and research that inspires her designs, to theproduction of her ethereal embroidered sculptures. She guides you through 12 creativity-prompting activities to help you begin your own mastery of this method. As you learn to find your desired shape or pattern in nature, from sources like leaves, shells, or coral, then use your sewing machine to turn bits into exquisite art. You'll also enjoy dozens of inspirational photos of Woolnough's ownart pieces. Woolnough's instructions offer simple but highlyversatile techniques, and allow you space for your own creative approach. ‘]
Publishing details: Schiffer Pub Ltd, 2018, 176pp, pb
Ref: 1000
Mora Mirkaview full entry
Reference: Mirka Mora : a life making art / Sabine Cotte. [’Mirka Mora features a rich insight into the intellectual life and art practice of one of Australia's most versatile, creative and prolific modern artists. A Melbourne cultural icon, Mirka, along with her ex-husband Georges, was instrumental in helping to establish Australian modern art on a global stage. She was integral in reviving the meetings of the Contemporary Artists Society, whose members included friends John Perceval and John and Sunday Reed, and later in creating hubs for artistic figures at Mirka cafe and the Balzac restaurant. Among her many artistic achievements, Mirka is much admired for her Flinders Street mural, Adelaide Festival frieze and stained-glass paintings at Heide. This book focuses on her idiosyncratic processes, which are largely self-taught and blend traditional techniques with modern creativity. With privileged access to Mirka and her studio, Sabine Cotte offers an intimate portrait of one of Australia's best-loved artists.’] Includes bibliographic references (pages 245-262) and index.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia, 2019 
©2019 
ix, 268 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits
Ref: 1009
Paterson Julieview full entry
Reference: Clothbound, iconic fabric designs : stories of a handmade process / Julie Paterson. [’For over 20 years, Julie Paterson, founder of ClothFabric, has been designing and printing contemporary textiles by hand. Her iconic patterns, inspired by and connected to the Australian landscape, have been applied to furnishings, rugs and wallpapers and sold the world over. ClothBound is the story of Julie’s most significant and well loved designs, and offers a very intimate insight into the creative process of a much loved artist, designer and maker at work in her shed.’]
Publishing details: Murdoch Books, 2015, 232 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
McAulay Thomas (b1946)view full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, SH166 - Bob Hawke & Blanche d'Alpuget Mementos Curiosities Art and Design, Tuesday 27 August 2019:
lot 1: Thomas McAulay (b.1946)
Outback Landscape
oil on board, signed l.r.c. ‘McAulay’
Measurements:
90 x 121 cm
Provenance:
The Collection of Bob Hawke and Blanche d’Alpuget, Sydney
Reference:
In 1990 Thomas McAulay was commissioned by the then Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, to complete a series of paintings of Australians in sport. In 2000 he was the selected Queensland artist represented in the 'Sports in Art' exhibition held in Adelaide.
Freeman Richardview full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, SH166 - Bob Hawke & Blanche d'Alpuget Mementos Curiosities Art and Design, Tuesday 27 August 2019:
lot 132
Richard Freeman
Portrait of Bob Hawke
with label verso ‘For Bob and Blanche, With Thanks Angus and Pan Mac’
Measurements:
42 x 30 cm
Provenance:
The Collection of Bob Hawke and Blanche d’Alpuget, Sydney
Pratt Louisview full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, SH166 - Bob Hawke & Blanche d'Alpuget Mementos Curiosities.
various worls including: Louis Pratt (b.1972)
The Alchemist, 1999; John Taussan, 1998
book cover collages (2)
Measurements:
23 x 15 cm; 21.5 x 16cm
Provenance:
Australian Galleries, Sydney, The Collection of Bob Hawke and Blanche d’Alpuget, Sydney
Labels:
Australian Galleries, Stock Nos. 27755, 27754
Horner Arthur (1916-1997)view full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, SH166 - Bob Hawke & Blanche d'Alpuget Mementos Curiosities. lot 171:
cartoon, Arthur Horner (1916-1997)
Blanch d'Alpuget - Cartoon
ink on paper, signed l.r.c. ‘Horner’
Measurements:
33 x 39 cm
Provenance:
The Collection of Bob Hawke and Blanche d’Alpuget, Sydney
Goon Yurikoview full entry
Reference: see Shapiro auction, SH166 - Bob Hawke & Blanche d'Alpuget Mementos Curiosities. lot 175:
Yuriko Goon (20th Century)
Jacaranda Stud, 1992
acrylic on canvas board, signed l.l.c. ‘Y. Goon’, with presentation plaque on frame
Measurements:
49 x 75 cm
Provenance:
The Collection of Bob Hawke and Blanche d’Alpuget, Sydney
Fuller S Pearceview full entry
Reference: see Lawsons timed internet auction Artarmon Home Contents - Sale 8804A - Lot 41: S. Pearce Fuller (Aus/NZ active 1870s-1910s)
Creek Through the Hillsides, 1878
oil on canvas
49cm x 75cm
SLR and dated 1878
Bloxam Ethel Annie 1870-1971view full entry
Reference: Probably the correct name for Ethel ‘DArcourt Bloxam as recorded in McCulloch and in Caroline Ambrus Ladies Picture Show. This information is from a user of the Scheding Index who also noted d’Arcourt might indeed be A’Court, the middle name of Ethels’s father.
Aurukun artistsview full entry
Reference: Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Bell Jack view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Bowenda Trevor view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Koomeeta Craig view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Koo'oila Akay view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Marbendinar Vernon view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Marpoondin David view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Namponan Gary view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Namponan Leigh view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Ngallametta Mavis view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Pambegan Alair view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Koo'Ekka Arthur Pambegam jrview full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Pootchemunka Margaret Jane view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Wikmunea Keith view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Yunkaporta Jacob view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Yunkaporta Roderick view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Yunkaporta Ron view full entry
Reference: see Aurukun artists : wiy min yumpan ngamp. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Andrew Baker Art Dealer, Bowen Hills. Works by Jack Bell, Trevor Bowenda, Craig Koomeeta, Akay Koo'oila, Vernon Marbendinar, David Marpoondin, Gary Namponan, Leigh Namponan, Mavis Ngallametta, Alair Pambegan, Arthur Koo'Ekka Pambegam jr, Margaret Jane Pootchemunka, Keith Wikmunea, Jacob Yunkaporta, Roderick Yunkaporta, Ron Yunkaporta.
Publishing details: Bowen Hills, Qld. : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, c2008 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 21 cm. 
Norton Rosalindview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book Auctions
August 24, 2019, 1:00 PM AEST
Ultimo, Australia, lot 88: An unpublished draft manuscript entitled Dark Rosaleen, by Keith Richmond (signed 1996), being 352 typed foolscap pages, in 3 binders, holding much fascinating and new biographical information on the Witch of KIngs Cross.
Ref: 1000
Duncan Kenview full entry
Reference: Australia Wide by Ken Duncan.
Publishing details: Published by Panographs 2002. Oblong Original leather cloth with leather slipcase.
Ref: 1000
Undergrowthview full entry
Reference: Undergrowth A Magazine of Youth and ideals. Edited by Nancy Hall. Original wrappers 16 pages. Tipped in colour frontispiece by Roland Wakelin, full page lino-cuts by Edgar Ritchard, Gladys Gibbons and Gwen Ridley with a lino-cut cover design by D Hawthorne. [Trove notes just one set (?) and that at University of Queensland library].
Publishing details: Sydney, single issue from Sept Oct 1928.
Ref: 1000
Undergrowth : a magazine of youth and idealsview full entry
Reference: Undergrowth : a magazine of youth and ideals / edited by Nancy A. Hall and Dore Hawthorne. Journal. Some issues are duplicated typescript. Digital master available National Library of Australia

Publishing details: [Sydney] : N. Hall and D. Hawthorne, [1924-1930?] 
v. : ill. ; 29cm. Life Dates Ended in 1930?  Began in 1924 
Ref: 1000
Hall Nancy Aview full entry
Reference: see Undergrowth : a magazine of youth and ideals / edited by Nancy A. Hall and Dore Hawthorne. Journal. Some issues are duplicated typescript. Digital master available National Library of Australia

Publishing details: [Sydney] : N. Hall and D. Hawthorne, [1924-1930?] 
v. : ill. ; 29cm. Life Dates Ended in 1930?  Began in 1924 
Hawthorne Dore view full entry
Reference: see Undergrowth : a magazine of youth and ideals / edited by Nancy A. Hall and Dore Hawthorne. Journal. Some issues are duplicated typescript. Digital master available National Library of Australia

Publishing details: [Sydney] : N. Hall and D. Hawthorne, [1924-1930?] 
v. : ill. ; 29cm. Life Dates Ended in 1930?  Began in 1924 
McKay Barbara b1939view full entry
Reference: Barbara McKay: Sacred. [’Barbara McKay is one of Australia’s truly significant female abstract expressionist artists. Feted by renowned American art critic Clement Greenberg but at times overlooked in her homeland, Sacred reveals McKay’s commitment to immersing herself wholly into the gestural expression of the world and environment around her. This is McKay’s first retrospective exhibition and spans more than 50 years of dedicated art practice.’]
Publishing details: New England Regional Art Gallery, 2019
Ref: 1000
Wilson Hadynview full entry
Reference: Hadyn Wilson: An Historical Novel. [’Hadyn Wilson has undertaken a journey of creative sleuthing and research to put together an alternative history of selected works in the Hinton Collection. From the beloved ‘Yellow Gloves’ moonlighting as a fast food icon to commentary on international politics in James Cook’s ‘The Bequinage, Brussels’, Wilson casts a contemporary eye on paintings of the past resulting in a renewed questioning and engagement with the works.’]
Publishing details: New England Regional Art Gallery, 2019
Ref: 1000
Sheard Charlieview full entry
Reference: Charlie Sheard: Absolute Abstraction. [’This exhibition presents the work of Charlie Sheard, one of Sydney’s most respected abstract painters who has spent the last forty years developing a language of pure abstract forms. His practice is deeply concerned with the history and development of techniques and materials, and his large paintings reflect upon his wide ranging interest in European, Chinese and Australian cultural history. Charlie Sheard is represented in Sydney by May Space.’]
Publishing details: Manly Art Gallry, 2019
Ref: 1000
Dawson Kerryview full entry
Reference: from artist’s website: ‘My canvas evolves with no pre-conceived idea of what the end result will be. However, there will be a starting point; an idea, a feeling, a colour or shape, could also serve as a point of departure. This process runs a fine line of success and creates an unpredictable tension between the conscious and subconscious that is only resolved at it's conclusion.
I attempt to create marks that are authentic, honest and organic from either the brush or a less conventional tool. The intention is always to strive for a pure essence of abstraction and to explore the limitless possibilities the art-form has to offer.
In my commercial art background, colour palettes are formal and have to be justified. The luxury of complete freedom in the abstract form is what inspires me. Ideas are expressed through the language of colour, composition, form and texture. My large scale canvases of encaustic wax sweeps and layering of fragmented dripping washes are the culmination of a lifetime of creative vocation.
I studied graphic design in New Zealand and art at the Brera Art Academy in Milan, Italy. The pursuit of a creative life started at an early age. Growing up in a small coastal New Zealand town in the early 1980s, inspiration was all around me. The volcanic land and seascapes, the natural beauty of the countryside and the tribal art of indigenous Maori all had an influence. An art teacher exposed me to local masters such as, Philip Clairmont, Bill Hammond and Colin McCahon. This spurred my development along with international masters, David Hockney and Andy Warhol whose use of colour combinations is fearless.
A recent visit to Vienna exposed me to Miro` at the Albertina Museum. I was taken aback at the force, simplicity and gravity of his mark-making and contemporary vision. I was drawn into the canvases and in awe of those intensly powerful, primal and innovative images of their time.
I draw inspiration from the mid-twentieth century New York school of abstract expressionists, Willem de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Hans Hoffman, Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Mark Rothko, and Cy Ywombly. Australian artists, Sally Gabori, Sam Holt, Waldemar Kolbusz, Anthony Lister, John Olson, Peter Sharp and Brett Whiteley are also strong influences.’
Publishing details: Sheffer Gallery, Darlington, July 2015
Westlake Kateview full entry
Reference: see article in Sydney Morning Herald, August 17-18, 2019, Spectrum, p14 (on brother Nigel Westlake, composer)
Kay Marjeryview full entry
Reference: see Raffan Kelleher and Thomas online auction, 25 August 2019, lot 2: MARJERY KAY, Robert (Bobby) Blaikie Leith, oil on board, 69 x 56 cm, signed lower right
CONDITION
Inscibed verso: Painted by Margery Kay in 1942/1943 as her gift of comfort to Pop and Missus after she heard that he had been killed in S.A.A.F. (at sea, off Bushman's Ridge)
Lewis Brandt view full entry
Reference: Brandt Lewis - Recasting. Exhibition: 5 - 24 September 2019

Recasting is the latest solo exhibition by Brandt Lewis who further develops the themes of staging and narrative from his 2017 show at Thienny Lee Gallery, Staging Stills. Lewis continues his format of still-life painting to present a variety of stories incorporating manikins and toy animals. The narratives within these works stage retellings of art history, animals questioning their rightful place while mourning their losses, as well as various contexts of the artist’s self-observation. Lewis cleverly ‘gets his hand’ into his paintings through the careful placement of a white director’s glove, asserting his presence in the staging of some stories.

“The manikins are retelling various art historical pictures in their own terms as well as playing at being people in other scenarios; ‘The Blind Leading the Blind’ by Bruegel is restaged by manikins without eyes, and everyday experiences become more real for the wooden figures than the ‘real’ people.” – Brandt Lewis
 




Publishing details: Thienny Lee Gallery, 2019,
176 New South Head Road, Edgecliff, NSW 2027

Ref: 1000
Figuerola Alma c.1895-1969view full entry
Reference: see Joels auction 22 August 2019, Sale LJW8280, for three lots. Note Joels giver her dates as c.1895-1969
Andrew Jeremyview full entry
Reference: NLA catalogue: [Biographical cuttings on Jeremy Andrew, architecture graduate / cartoonist illustrator, containing one or more cuttings from newspapers or journals]
Andrew Jeremyview full entry
Reference: see Property Observer, 5 June, 2013: ‘Andrew’s first job was a comic artist for the Sydney Morning Herald, and has since worked with the likes of MTV, Adidas, Diesel, Converse and Reed Space Gallery in New York.
Andrew splits his time between his studio in Bondi Beach Sydney and in Soho New York where his creative and life partner, Megan Mair plan to spend more time.’
Jeremy view full entry
Reference: see Andres Jeremy, cartoonist, dsigner
Orsini Cherylview full entry
Reference: from Harper Collins website: Cheryl Orsini has illustrated and designed several titles for children, including I Wish I'd Danced with Anna Pavlova and My Funky Fishing Book. She is also a graphic designer who has worked for a variety of clients in the theatre, film and music industries.
Caruana Wallyview full entry
Reference: Night Fishing by Jamie Grant (illustrated by Wally Caruana).
Publishing details: Canberra: Open Door Press, 1976.
Ref: 1000
Caruana Wallyview full entry
Reference: Boundaries by Judith Wright ; illustration by Wally Caruana

Publishing details: Canberra : Open Door Press, 1976
Ref: 1000
Caruana Wallyview full entry
Reference: The water carrier / Craig Powell ; illustration by Wally Caruana


 
Mickey Mouse balloon / Thomas Shapcott ; illustration by Wally Caruana
by Shapcott, Thomas W. (Thomas William), 1935-
Canberra : Open Door Press, 1976
Publishing details: Canberra : Open Door Press, 1976
Ref: 1000
Caruana Wallyview full entry
Reference: Mickey Mouse balloon / Thomas Shapcott ; illustration by Wally Caruana


Publishing details: Canberra : Open Door Press, 1976
Ref: 1000
Talaj Tomaszview full entry
Reference: Tomasz Talaj, Exhibition, Peter Walker Fine Art.
‘TOMASZ TALAJ is an Adelaide based artist producing subtle and ethereal landscapes.
Tomasz was born in the UK in 1964 and moved to Australia in the early 1970s. He graduated from RMIT with a Bachelor of Arts in 1987. In 2007 and 2009 Tomasz was a finalist in the Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize as well as a finalist in the Cromwell Art Prize in 2005. His work has featured in the Foxtel series love my way with Sam Worthington and Asher Keddie.
Tomasz has exhibited nationally and internationally and his work is held in numerous public and private collections including Ecole des Beaux Arts - Paris, Jardim Botanico - Rio de Janeiro and the Golden Dragon Museum - Bendigo, Victoria.

EXHIBITION
Thursday 22 August - Saturday 7 September 2019
Open: Thursday - Saturday 11am - 5pm
101 Walkerville Terrace 
Walkerville, South Australia’
Publishing details: Peter Walker Fine Art, Adelaide, 2019
Ref: 1000
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett, IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN + INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, SYDNEY, 28 August 2019 for 8 works, lots 1-8, with extensive catalogue entries. From the Ken and Joan Plomley Collection.
Macqueen Kennethview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett, IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN + INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, SYDNEY, 28 August 2019 for 8 works, lots 32 36, with short catalogue essay. From the Ken and Joan Plomley Collection.
IMPORTANT WORKS BY KENNETH MACQUEEN

IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART
SYDNEY- 28 AUGUST 2019

‘I try in my work to express the joy of living […] Australia is not a sinister country, nor is she harsh. Her bush is not drab. It is full of gaiety if one will trouble to seek. She has her grim moods […] and there is always the glory of her skies, and when she smiles, it is of transcending beauty’.1
KENNETH MACQUEEN - SUPPLEMENTARY IMAGE.JPG

KENNETH MACQUEEN
photo by Revan Macqueen

Kenneth Macqueen embodied the romantic figure of the farmer-artist, a man whose love and appreciation of the land upon which he lived shone through in his lyrical landscape paintings. With crisp light and line, and an astounding formal simplicity, Macqueen’s watercolours are patently modern, infusing in the genteel medium a dynamic vitality. The post-war decades in Australia were characterised by optimism, protectionism, and the creation of a national idiom in landscape painting, rehabilitating the impressionist ideal of the Australian pastoral.2 In attempting to adapt landscape painting to the specificities of the Australian environment and to the stylised techniques of Modern painting, Macqueen joined pioneering Sydney modernists Elioth Gruner, Roland Wakelin and Roy de Maistre, exhibiting with them annually at Society of Artists and Contemporary Group exhibitions.
After serving in the First World War, Macqueen returned to Australia and, with his brother, purchased a farm in Queensland’s Darling Downs. From 1922, the artist lived there, at Murralah, situated on the crest of a hill near Millmerran, working the land and enjoying its panoramic views of undulating hills and sweeping skies. Macqueen’s watercolours display a strong formalist and graphic impulse, featuring bold lines and panes of vibrant colour in semi-abstract compositions. Having mapped out the stylised forms of the landscape in pencil en plein air, Macqueen worked quickly in the studio, systematically applying wet-on-wet washes of watercolour pigment and often leaving areas of his white paper support untouched. The resulting patterns, while simple and easily legible, are characterised by a sense of freshness and spontaneity.

Forming a chronicle of life in rural Queensland, Macqueen’s subjects were an immediate and truthful depiction of his experience: planting, harvesting, ploughing and fencing. Finding solace in the monotony of rural life, Macqueen delighted in the stillness and expansive space. Bodumba Lands, 1927 is a crisp sweeping view of the immediate surrounds of Millmeran, with rolling peaks and contrasting strips of recently tilled fields. Farmer’s Fence, 1928, similarly traces the sinuous man-made profiles of a fence and worn path against a dramatic backdrop of a young crop of wheat and freshly ploughed hill. In the 1930s and 1940s, Macqueen made regular holiday trips to the Sunshine and Gold Coasts, creating dramatic paintings of the coastline and sea, as can be seen in Early Morning, 1934 and Sea and Reef, c.1938. Amongst the Paperbarks, a mature work focussed on formal patterns, explores the shadows and forms of a eucalypt forest, punctuated by a flowering banksia in the foreground.

1. Macqueen, K., Adventures in Watercolour, The Legend Press, Sydney, 1948
2. Edwards, D., ‘Landscapes of Modernity 1920s – 1940s’, Sydney Moderns, Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2012, p. 217

LUCIE REEVES-SMITH

Hardwicke Frederick attributedview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett, IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN + INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, SYDNEY, 28 August 2019. lot 72:
72
ATTRIBUTED TO FREDERIC HARDWICKE
FANNY HARDWICKE: A NATIVE WITH A RINGTAILED POSSUM, VAN DIEMEN’S LAND, c.1822 – 24
ink and watercolour on paper
27.5 x 22.0 cm
inscribed with title lower centre: Fanny Hardwick [sic] / a native with a ringtailed possum, of / Van deimans [sic] Land.
PROVENANCE
Private collection
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 7 November 1979, lot 99
Ken and Joan Plomley Collection of Modernist Art, Melbourne
LITERATURE
Plomley, N.J.B (ed.), Friendly Mission: the Tasmanian journals and papers of George Augustus Robinson, 1829-1834, Tasmanian Historical Research Association, Bellerive, Tasmania, 1966, p. 105
Anderson, S., Charles Browne Hardwicke: an Early Tasmanian Pioneer, Wentworth Books, Sydney, 1978, pp. 60, 61 (illus.), 63
Fletcher, M., Costume in Australia, 1788-1901, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1984, pl. 6 (illus.), p. 31
Broadbent, J., and Hughes, J. (eds), The Age of Macquarie, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1992, p. 151 (illus.)
Kerr, J. (ed.), The Dictionary of Australian Artists: Painters, Sketchers, Photographers and Engravers to 1870, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1992, p. 347 (illus.)
Coleman, D., Romantic Colonization and British Anti-Slavery, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2005, fig. 14, pp. 196 (illus.), 197 – 98
RELATED WORKS
Other examples of this print are held in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; and the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Victoria
CATALOGUE TEXT
The separation of indigenous children from their families and their institutionalization or adoption by Europeans is a familiar colonial-ethnocidal practice. The existence of such abuses in the Australian setting is well-known, being most recently and most comprehensively documented in the Bringing them home report.1 They were certainly commonplace in early settler Van Diemen’s Land – indeed, well before the Black War of the late 1820s, we find Lt-Gov. William Sorell making reference to the ‘Outrages of Miscreants … who sometimes wantonly fire at and kill the Men, and at others pursue the Women for the purpose of compelling them to abandon their Children…’.2 At the 2019 Dark Mofo festival, as part of the outdoor exhibition Dark Path, contemporary Trawlwoolway artist Julie Gough presented a haunting installation entitled Missing or Dead. This work – comprising ‘wanted’ posters attached to trees in the bush of the Hobart Domain – documents the lives of 185 Tasmanian Aboriginal stolen children whose traces Gough has been able to find in settler archives.

In addition to written records, the tragic lives of these orphan First Nations children of Van Diemen’s Land are recorded in two poignant watercolour portraits. One is Thomas Bock’s well-known image of Mathinna, a Lowreenne girl born in exile on Flinders Island in 1835. She was ‘given’ to Lt-Gov. Sir John Franklin and his wife in 1840, only to be abandoned to the Queen’s Orphan School when the vice-regal couple returned to England three years later. Bock’s drawing shows the ‘unconquerable’3 seven-year-old wearing a ‘red frock. Like my father’,4 but with bare feet.5

The present work, though obviously not as carefully-observed or technically adept as Bock’s, has a comparable historical significance and a similar affective power. Like Mathinna, Fanny Hardwicke is doll-dressed in European clothes – in this case an empire line printed muslin day dress, with capped long sleeves and a triple-tucked hem. She, too, is without shoes. However, it is not the pathos of a barefoot black child in a cast-off English dress that gives this work its appeal, but rather the evident strong character of the sitter. Fanny’s gaze is direct and open, and her cherry-lipped mouth smiles warmly at the viewer. In her right hand she holds by the tail what is evidently a pet, but which also serves as a sign of her Aboriginality: a little ring-tailed possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus).

Although the name Frances was not uncommon in this period, and there has been some confusion between the several Indigenous Fannys that appear in the archive,6 it seems likely that Fanny Hardwicke is the sealer’s woman interviewed by George Augustus Robinson in the Hobart Town Gaol in October 1829. Robinson’s journal describes ‘Fanny, who speaks English well and knows not a word of the aboriginal tongue,’ clear evidence of a settler upbringing, though she evidently retained the native name Mitteyer. Robinson also notes ‘that she could navigate a schooner, could hand reef and steer. In make she was of middle stature, strong and very robust, and of quick intellect; and had been baptised by a clergyman at Launceston, Reverend Youl’.7 Originally a Trawlwoolway from Ringarooma, at the time of her meeting with Robinson, Fanny was the companion of a Bass Strait sealer named Baker, later living and working with ‘Norfolk Island Jack’ Williams, both at the Kent Group and on Kangaroo Island.

The northern Tasmanian settler who presumably raised the girl was Charles Hardwicke, a former Royal Navy officer who arrived in Sydney on the infamous General Hewart voyage of 1814.8 Granted permission to remain in the colony and awarded a land grant of 200 acres, Hardwicke established a successful pastoral venture at Norfolk Plains (Longford).9 According to a descendant, ‘Hardwicke extended kindness to the native Tasmanians, and had one of them in his home as a servant, and sought to educate and train her’.10

The drawing is evidently the work of an amateur, and in Joan Kerr’s Dictionary of Australian Artists… it is attributed to Hardwicke himself.11 However, it is worth noting that Charles’ younger brother Frederic, who arrived in the colony in 1822, was at least something of an artist; Charles’ chart of his maritime expedition from Port Dalrymple to North West Cape in that same year is illustrated with three landscape sketches by Frederic.12 It is here proposed that Frederic is the artist of the present work.

1. Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families, Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra, 1997
2. ‘Government and General Orders’, Hobart Town Gazette and Southern Reporter, Hobart, 13 March 1819, p. 1
3. The adjective is Lady Franklin’s, from a letter to her sister of February 1843, quoted in Kolenberg, H., ‘Unconquerable spirit’, in Thomas, D. (ed.), Creating Australia: 200 years of art 1788-1988, International Cultural Corporation of Australia/Art Gallery Board of South Australia, Adelaide, 1988, p. 95
4. Letter to Lady Franklin 14 November 1841, transcribed by Mathinna’s adoptive sister Eleanor Franklin, National Library of Australia, Gell and Franklin family papers 1800-1955 (Australian Joint Copying Project), Reel M379
5. The fragmentary letter also says ‘I have got sore feet and shoes and stockings.’ In a classic piece of cultural sublimation, for many years the drawing was housed in an oval mount which obscured the child’s obnoxious pedal extremities.
6. Two others are listed by N.J.B. Plomley from the journals of George Augustus Robinson: an adolescent girl who died in 1831 and Wutapuwitja (Wortabowidgee), also known as ‘Jock’, who was the wife of Tunnerminnerwait (‘Jack’), one of Robinson’s ‘friendly natives.’ Curiously, the eldest child of Charles Hardwicke, Fanny’s presumed adoptive father, was also named Frances (b. 1820).
7. Plomley, N.J.B., (ed.), Friendly Mission: the Tasmanian Journals and Papers of George Augustus Robinson 1829-1834, Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery/Quintus Publishing, Launceston, second edition, 2008, pp. 91 – 92. Baptismal records show that Rev. Youl baptised a ’native child of about eleven years of age’ on 12 January 1820. Church Registers of the Anglican Parish of St John’s, Launceston, Archives Office of Tasmania, NS748/1/3
8. See Bateson, C., The Convict Ships, Library of Australian History, Sydney, 2004, pp. 198 – 199
9. By 1829 his landholdings had expanded to a total of 3,000 acres; he is today largely remembered as a pioneer of horse-breeding and racing in Tasmania. See Pretyman, E.R., 'Hardwicke, Charles Browne (1788–1880)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/hardwicke-charles-browne-2154/text2751, published first in hardcopy 1966, accessed online 13 July 2019.
10. Anderson, S., Charles Browne Hardwicke: an Early Tasmanian Pioneer, Wentworth Books, Sydney, 1978, p. 63
11. Kerr, J. (ed.), The Dictionary of Australian Artists: Painters, Sketchers, Photographers and Engravers to 1870, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1992, pp. 346 – 7. Kerr’s even more determinedly feminist online successor, Design and Art Australia Online suggests the drawing may be by Charles’ wife Elizabeth (née Chapman). See https://www.daao.org.au/bio/charles-browne-hardwicke/ (accessed 16 July 2019)
12. Archives office of Tasmania, 343/1/3. Frederic’s technical understanding is illuminated in a remark in a letter from his brother to Lt-Gov. Sorell: ‘My brother … begs me to assure your honour that he is sorry for not being able to furnish some views he had taken, by this conveyance, for the want of two or three particular colours, but hopes soon to be able to send them.’ Letter, 23 January 1824, quoted in Anderson, op. cit., p. 35

Dr David Hansen
Associate Professor, Centre for Art History and Art Theory, School of Art and Design, Australian National University

Riley W Eview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett, IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN + INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, SYDNEY, 28 August 2019. lot 76
W.E. RILEY
(1807 – 1836)
PORTRAITS OF A PRIZE RAM AND EWE, 1828
lithograph
22.5 x 29.5 cm
inscribed below image: Exhibited at Paramatta Oct. 1828 before the Agricultural Society of New South Wales from the Electoral Saxon flocks of Raby.
ESTIMATE: 
$4,000 – 6,000
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PROVENANCE
Private collection
Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne
Ken and Joan Plomley Collection of Modernist Art, Melbourne, acquired from the above in 1987
EXHIBITED
Australian and Australian-Related Art: 1830s-1970s, Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne, 25 November – 11 December 1987, cat. 2 (illus. in exhibition catalogue)
RELATED WORKS
Other examples of this print are held in the collections of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney and the National Library of Australia, Canberra
Wilson Hadynview full entry
Reference: see SL Magazine, Spring 2019, article on the artist by Caroline Baum, p18-19
Publishing details: SLNSW, Spring, 2019
Rae John view full entry
Reference: SL Magazine, Spring 2019, article on the artist by Rachel Franks, pages 28-31 (article o the artist’s habit of doodling).
Publishing details: SLNSW, Spring, 2019
Ref: 136
Rae John view full entry
Reference: see Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand, 2018 Annual Conference
28–30 November, 7 Paper – Dr Rachel Franks, “A Marginalised History: The Art of John Rae in the Minute Books of the City of Sydney”
Officer Mabelview full entry
Reference: see John Nicholson auction, UK, 4 September, 2019, lot 385: Miss Mabel Officer (19th - 20th Century) British. "On the Derwent, Tasmania", Oil on Artist's Board, Signed and Dated 1938, and Inscribed on labels on the reverse, 11" x 16". Exhibited: Royal Academy Exhibition 1939.
Reed Dennis William 1917-1979view full entry
Reference: see John Nicholson auction, UK, 4 September, 2019, lot 432: Denis William Reed (1917-1979) British. "Wedge Tailed Eagle", Study of a Bird, Mixed Media, Signed in Pencil and Inscribed 'Australia & Tasmania', and with the Artist's Studio Stamp on the reverse, 15" x 11". Exhibited: 'Denis Reed Paintings', Royal West of England Academy, Clifton, Bristol, 1992.
Allport Cecil collectorview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Allport Henry Curzonview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Allport Lilyview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Allport Mary Mortonview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Allport Mortonview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Allport Library and Museum of Fine Artview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Black Dorrit p 93 192view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Blythe Eliza p13-14 112view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Blythe Eliza p13-14 112view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Coates Dora Meeson p78view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Meeson Dora p78view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Hood Betty (Elizabeth)view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Hood Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Meredith Louisa Ann p14 17view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Proctor Thea p72 74view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Ritchie Charles various referencesview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Swan Louisa p14 18 55 90view full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Walker Mary various referencesview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Walker Mary various referencesview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Paris Edmondview full entry
Reference: Album pittoresque d’un voyage autour du monde exécuté par ordre du Gouvernement Francais. Casimir Henricy (1814 - 1900).[’The circumnavigation by Admiral Paris in the Artémis took place between 1837 and 1840. The engravings from the original drawings include a chillingly grim view of the penal colony at Port Arthur (Van Diemen’s Land); the Artémis run aground at Papeete (Tahiti); and a view of Honolulu. The introductory text by Henricy places each engraving in the context of the route taken by the Artémis, which visited Sydney as well as Hobart. Other views include those of Rio de Janeiro, Macao, Calcutta, Muscat etc.
A luxurious large format reissue of the finely engraved illustrations originally published in the Laplace edition of 1841. Forbes writes: ‘This is a deluxe limited edition evidently assembled with the aid of Edmond Paris, who had become a distinguished admiral. Some authorities consider the plates better printed in this edition than in the Laplace text. It has always been a very difficult work to obtain and is found in surprisingly few collections of Pacific voyages’.
Forbes 3535; not in Ferguson.
Scarce. A single example is recorded in Australian collections (State Library of New South Wales).’ From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, 2019].

Publishing details: Paris : Charles Noblet, [1883]. Oblong quarto, red patterned cloth with embossed and gilt pictorial design, spine with gilt lettering (rebacked), all edges gilt, pp 1-8 [text] and 25 leaves with engravings by de Laplante from drawings by Paris
Ref: 1000
Williams Florence Elizabethview full entry
Reference: From Day Fine Art website 2019: ‘Florence Elizbath Williams (17 May 1833- 4 April 1915)
Florence Elizabeth Williams was a painter born in London on 17 May 1833, eldest of the six children of Ralph Thomas, a barrister, and Ann, née Mallett. As Florence later recollected, she learnt much from the child prodigy John Everett Millais (1829-1896) in about 1845 when he was employed for £100 a year by her father-Millais’s first patron-to draw pictures and paint in figures and backgrounds on old oil paintings that Thomas sold. Both had short tempers and Millais abruptly broke the contract after a year, only too conscious that the work was beneath his talents. While he was employed, however, Florence (‘Pobby’), aged about twelve, regularly saw ‘Johnny’ at work at her home and was taken to visit him in his studio. He drew in her sketchbook and corrected her drawings. Her first oil painting, a copy after ‘a small Collins’ (probably Charles Collins, another Pre-Raphaelite), was done with Johnny’s paints. He made her a model stage with a front depicting Apollo in his chariot flanked by the muses of Comedy and Tragedy for which she made the scenery and costumed a tiny articulated wooden lay figure he gave her (which she kept all her life).
Many years later, J.G. Millais claimed in his biography of his father (1899) that the young artist had been exploited by his greedy, ignorant patron ‘Serjeant Thomas’. But ‘Serjeant’ was then a title for a senior barrister, Florence pointed out when she joined battle to defend her long-dead father. She contributed ‘Recollections of Johnny Millais by an early friend’ and a commentary on the biography to Serjeant Thomas and Sir J.E. Millais (London 1901), a pamphlet published privately in brother Ralph’s name. As well as recording her childhood memories, she mentioned that the Thomas and Millais families remained on intimate terms and that she visited Millais’s studio to see Ophelia and A Huguenot before they were sent to the Royal Academy in 1852.
Apart from these lessons Florence had little art training, yet she was painting and selling oil paintings and exhibiting at the Royal Academy [RA] while still in her teens, showing Goat in an Orchard at the RA from 68 Wimpole Street, London in 1852. The following year she showed Juliet and Leonora with the Royal Society of British Artists (Suffolk Street) and Rosa.- Vide Bleak House at the British Institution [BI], the latter for sale at five pounds. From 1 Sergeant’s Inn in 1854 she showed two fruit paintings at the BI, one for sale at five pounds the other at ten, while the following year from 19 Arundel Street she showed at Suffolk Street “Who can have sent me these flowers?” (2 guineas) and A Farm Yard, Westbrook (6 guineas). That year a fruit painting was on offer at the BI for the extremely high price of thirty-five guineas. In 1856, from 36 Norfolk Street, The Strand, another fruit picture was sent to the BI for sale at twenty guineas, along with A Labourer’s Shed, Westbrook , more modestly price at six guineas, and she also had an untitled painting at Suffolk Street for sale at five guineas. At the same venue in 1857 she had A study from nature (six guineas) and Dressed Up (six guineas). She continued to exhibit with the Society of British Artists until 1868, although Dessert (6 guineas) in 1858 was her last exhibit at the British Institution.
On 13 September 1862, Florence Elizabeth Williams married the civil engineer Alfred Williams, a son of (Sir) Edward Leader Williams, an eminent English engineer and member of the well-known Williams family of painters [see F. Reynolds, The Williams Family of Painters , 1975], in St George’s, Leicester Square. They had two children – Edith Florence, known as Edie (1863-1943), and Reginald (1877-1942) – and adopted Minnie (Rozzie) Philpotts (1874-1956). Florence continued to paint after her marriage. In 1863 Mrs Alfred Williams (as she was henceforth catalogued) of Ponfield Villa, Bristol Road, Gloucester showed Lie still, sailor at Suffolk Street for sale at fifteen guineas (the mind boggles, but it was presumably a child admonishing a toy or pet in the light of her other works). She showed The Pets at the Royal Academy in 1864. In 1865 the family came to NSW, Alfred having been put in charge of erecting the Nepean River railway bridge at Penrith after a design by John Whitton, chief engineer of the NSW Railways, who wrote a testimonial for him on 18 January 1867 praising the completed work. Florence Williams’s undated oil view of the Penrith railway bridge (Mitchell Library) was evidently done at this time, since the family returned to England soon after the bridge was completed.
They settled at Farncombe Villa, Godalming, Surrey, from which address Mrs Alfred Williams sent three paintings to Suffolk Street in 1868: Flowers and Parrot (15 guineas), The new book (15 guineas) and A peep at Australia (10 guineas). The last may have been the conventionally composed but vibrantly coloured watercolour view of Sydney Harbour from Hyde Park, initialled ‘F.E.W.’ and dated June 1866, auctioned by Deutscher-Menzies in Melbourne on 24 November 1999 (lot 44). It was the last time Florence was to exhibit in London; henceforth she showed her paintings in Sydney and Hobart. The Williams came back to Australia in 1873, this time to Tasmania.
From their home at New Town, outside Hobart, Mrs Alfred Williams sent two oils to the 1874 exhibition of the NSW Academy of Art. Both were for sale when they were included among the Academy exhibits at the Agricultural Society of NSW’s Metropolitan Intercolonial Exhibition at Sydney in April 1875. The Dessert (cat.31), a ‘well grouped fruit piece, harmonious in colour, clear and juicy’ (which may have been the work shown with the BI in 1858, although she did different versions of the same subject), won a silver medal and was reported as making the mouth of every fruit-loving visitor water at the sight of it. The other (cat.18), The Lory at Home (1874, private collection, Hobart, initialled ‘F.E. W.’) was a new version of Flowers and Parrot shown in 1868 (which was destroyed in a family fire and is known only from a photograph). It had the same brightly painted bird and local wildflowers in the foreground with an added view of Hobart’s Mount Wellington behind. Praised by the Sydney Mail critic, it was nevertheless considered inferior to the still life: ‘The parrot, perched on a twig, is however wanting in “life” although most carefully painted. The wildflowers in the foreground (Epacris, &c.) are very well done.’ That year at Hood’s Picture Gallery, a commercial gallery in Hobart, ‘an acknowledged connoisseur’, the lawyer and amateur photographer Morton Allport (son of Mary Morton Allport ), purchased a pair of Mrs Williams’s flower paintings, Primroses and Roses .
In 1875 the family returned to Sydney, Alfred having been appointed engineer with the Harbours and Rivers Department. Mrs A. Williams’s Waratah , The Laughing Jackass , The Dessert which won only a certificate of merit this time, Fruit , Love in the Bush and The Doll’s House were among the oil paintings from the NSWAcademy of Art shown in the Fine Arts section of the Metropolitan Intercolonial Exhibition organised by the Agricultural Society of NSW that opened in Sydney on 6 April 1875. All were for sale except The Doll’s House (family collection), which also was awarded a certificate of merit. The subject of this ‘charming little composition’, Edie Williams playing with her doll’s house, was possibly inspired by Millais’s etching, The Baby House 1872 (ill. Josef Lebovic Collectors’ List 1997, no.66, cat. 87), although Mrs Williams’s version is far more personal, detailed and – ironically – early Pre-Raphaelite (perhaps even Bedemeier) in treatment. The early Pre-Raphaelite features of The Doll’s House and a complementary painting, The Story Teller (family collection), an equally detailed, rather frozen oil of Edie reading to her doll, are the purple, blue and acid green colours, the fidelity to nature at the expense of conventional ideas of beauty and, especially, the meticulous detail.
Florence’s paintings seem unique for Australia at the time when domestic genre paintings are almost unknown, the closest equivalents being a few oil paintings of women and children (known only in reproduction) done in Melbourne in the 1870s by the locally-trained Mary Livingstone – who mainly worked as a copyist – and old-fashioned, rather overblown figure paintings produced in Melbourne from the 1860s to the 1880s by the semi-professional painter Chester Earles .
Three more fruit paintings by Mrs. A. Williams followed in 1876, as well as The Pets.One of the fruit pictures collected another certificate of merit, although the Sydney Mail critic now considered such oil studies merely ‘good enough in their way’ and pointed out that they needed to be ‘exceedingly well painted to be attractive’. Yet the previous year the same newspaper (though not necessarily the same anonymous critic) had called her fruit pieces admirable and far more successful than those by J. H. Adamson . Mrs Williams’s fruit painting hung in the 1879 loan exhibition celebrating the opening of the National Art Gallery of New South Wales was later presented to the Sydney Technical College ‘for the benefit of art students’, according to her granddaughter Florence Hope Williams, but it has since disappeared.
In 1880 F.E. Williams was a founding member of the Art Society of NSW (an association for professional artists that had broken away from the more inclusive Academy) and henceforth exhibited regularly with it. At its first exhibition her ‘most attractive and original design’ Ophelia had the highest asking price in the show (£75) and was extravagantly praised by the Bulletin ‘s art critic:
The accuracy of the willows, the realistic painting and elegant arrangement of the flowers, and the chilly depth of the water in which is reflected grass so real that it almost seems to spring upon the banks before the eye, are proofs of the strict adherence both to nature and art, so strikingly manifested in this most attractive and original design.
Again Williams chose a subject made famous by Millais, but her Ophelia (unlocated) was shown ‘standing upon the “envious silver”, the breaking of which is so soon to precipitate her into the cold dark water beneath’, not floating in the stream.
As one of the very few figure paintings in the exhibition Ophelia gained most attention, but her four other oils, predictably ‘charming groups of flowers and one fruit picture’, were also admired, the ‘transparent lusciousness’ of the plums in the latter being especially noted. Primroses and Violets was exhibited in 1880 and 1881 (when it was stated to be a repeat showing from the previous year) and in 1881 she also showed ‘a rather large picture’, On the Brook , ‘a charming tangle of pale primroses, splendid violets, and delicate moss’. More flowers and fruit followed in succeeding years as well as extravagantly praised groups of rabbits (1883) and guinea pigs (1885). James Green (‘De Libra’) called her fruit paintings ‘perfect of their kind’, not unworthy of the popular English still-life painter William Henry (‘Birds’ Nest’) Hunt, while a pair of paintings of peaches she exhibited in 1884 could have been taken ‘for real but for the frames’.
Late in life the Williams lived at Bowral, NSW. Alfred died there in 1913.
Florence died 4th April 1915 ( date sourced by Integrity Resolutions)
Joan Kerr. https://www.daao.org.au/bio/florence-elizabeth-williams/biography/’
Hirschfeld-Mack Ludwigview full entry
Reference: see (Grisebach auction, Germany, 30 May, 2019, ‘Orangerie Bauhaus Forever’).Lots 277 and 282-293.

282 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Reflektorisches Farbenspiel“. Photographer: Hermann Eckner. 1923

Vintage. Gelatin silver print. 16,9 × 11,9 cm. (6 ⅝ × 4 ⅝ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 25.000 – 30.000
USD 28,100 – 33,700
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
283 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Brochure: „Farben Licht-Spiele. Wesen. Ziele. Kritiken“ and Photography: Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack (left) and colleague standing next to the light show apparatus. 1925

Brochure with 28 pages – Publisher: Artist#s edition, Weimar / Vintage. Gelatin silver print. Brochure: 12,2 × 19,6 cm / photograph: 10,9 × 8,4 cm (11,3 × 8,9 cm). (4 ¾ × 7 ¾ in. / photograph: 4 ¼ × 3 ¼ in. (4 ½ × 3 ½ in.))
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 3.000 – 4.000
USD 3,370 – 4,490
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
284 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Untitled. 1922

Lithograph, painted in watercolours, on laid paper. 15,5 × 22 cm (24,7 × 31,9 cm). (6 ⅛ × 8 ⅝ in. (9 ¾ × 12 ½ in.))
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
285 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Star dancer – journeyman's piece by the artist. 1922

Colour lithograph on laid paper. 42 × 31,5 cm (64,8 × 48,3 cm). (16 ½ × 12 ⅜ in. (25 ½ × 19 in.))
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 4.000 – 6.000
USD 4,490 – 6,740
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
286 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Untitled (figure in geometric shapes). Circa 1923

Tempera on canvas. 85 × 60 cm. (33 ½ × 23 ⅝ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 25.000 – 35.000
USD 28,100 – 39,300
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
287a Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Untitled (colour gradient shape composition). 1921

Coloured chalk and pencil on tissue paper. 12,3 × 14 cm. (4 ⅞ × 5 ½ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
287b Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Untitled (composition with lines, shapes and circles). 1921

Coloured chalk on tissue paper. 12,3 × 13,7 cm. (4 ⅞ × 5 ⅜ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
287c Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Untitled (figural-ornamental composition). 1921

Coloured chalk and pencil on tissue paper. 12,3 × 13,7 cm. (4 ⅞ × 5 ⅜ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
287d Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Bahnfahrt“. 1921

Coloured chalk and pencil on tissue paper. 12,3 × 14,8 cm. (4 ⅞ × 5 ⅞ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
288 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Bauhaus Ausstellung Weimar 1923 Juli August September“ and programme of the Bauhaus exhibition (leaflet). 1923

Lithograph on light cardboard (postcard) / typography on brownish paper. 10,4 × 15 cm / 16 × 21,8 cm. (4 ⅛ × 5 ⅞ in. / 6 ¼ × 8 ⅝ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
289 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Bauhaus Ausstellung Weimar Sommer 1923“. 1923

Colour lithograph on light cardboard (postcard). 10,6 × 15,4 cm. (4 ⅛ × 6 ⅛ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 1.500 – 2.000
USD 1,690 – 2,250
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
290 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Drachenfest Weimar“. 1922

Lithograph, painted in watercolours, on light cardboard (postcard). 10,5 × 15,5 cm. (4 ⅛ × 6 ⅛ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 1.500 – 2.000
USD 1,690 – 2,250
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
291 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Drachen Fest Weimar“. 1922

Lithograph, painted in watercolours, on light cardboard (postcard). 10,9 × 15,2 cm. (4 ¼ × 6 in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 1.500 – 2.000
USD 1,690 – 2,250
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
292a Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Kostüm für Fasching“. 1920

Watercolour and pencil on paper. 31,4 × 25,3 cm. (12 ⅜ × 10 in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
292b Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Figurine with circle joints. 1921

Gouache and pencil on brownish paper (from a sketch book). 19 × 15,6 cm. (7 ½ × 6 ⅛ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 3.000 – 5.000
USD 3,370 – 5,620
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
292c Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Figurines with yellow stripes. 1921/22

Watercolour and pen and India ink on thin Japan paper. 25,1 × 19,1 cm. (9 ⅞ × 7 ½ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 3.000 – 5.000
USD 3,370 – 5,620
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
292d Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
Cylindrical figurines. 1921

Watercolour and pen and India ink on paper. 28 × 18,1 cm. (11 × 7 ⅛ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 2.000 – 3.000
USD 2,250 – 3,370
Lot details
Note lotPlace bid
 
293 Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Frankfurt am Main 1893 – 1965 Sydney
„Pädagogische Puppenstube“. 1924 / execution 1960

Plywood, lacquered; connecting bars / wooden box. 50 × 50 × 40 cm. (19 ⅝ × 19 ⅝ × 15 ¾ in.)
Auction 305
Thursday, 30 May 2019 
02:00 PM
EUR 8.000 – 10.000
USD 8,990 – 11,200
Lot details
Law Benjamin 1807-1890 portrait of Woureddyview full entry
Reference: see Sotheby’s Australia, email to clients 20 May, 2019:
Important Australian Art for Private Sale - Benjamin Law 1807-1890.
Sotheby's Australia is pleased to offer Benjamin Law’s highly important Woureddy: An Aboriginal Chief of Van Diemen’s Land (1835) for private sale.
Benjamin Law is regarded as the first professional European sculptor to work in Australia and his exceptional portrait busts of Woorrady (died 1842) and his partner Trukanini (circa 1812-1876), remain amongst the most renowned compositions of the period. Woorrady, a Nuennone man from Bruny Island, was a skilled hunter, boat builder and storyteller who spoke five dialects.  Trukanini is arguably nineteenth-century Australia’s most celebrated Indigenous leader.
Woureddy: An Aboriginal Chief of Van Diemen’s Land is considered Australia’s first portrait sculpture.  Examples from the original casts are held in public Australian and international collections, including the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth; Australian Museum, Canberra; British Museum, London; Field Museum, Chicago; Musée de l’Homme, Paris; National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Queen Victoria Museum & Art Gallery, Launceston; South Australian Museum, Adelaide; Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery, Hobart; and The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh.


Dumaresq Williamview full entry
Reference: see Cheffins Auction UK, 12-13 June, 2019, lot 126: Captain William Dumaresq (1793-1868) and Colonel Henry Dumaresq (1792-1838) "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese, the river Neville in the foreground", watercolour, 22 x 33 cm (8.5 x 13in); together with a watercolour by Agnes Dumaresq, 1887, inscribed verso "Villars, Rhone Valley, Suisse", 12.5 x 17.5 cm (5 x 7in) (2)
Provenance: The Dumaresq family and by descent Other Notes: The brothers, Captain William and Colonel Henry Dumaresq, were both stationed in the colony of New South Wales, Australia. William was a brother-in-law to General (Sir) Ralph Darling, who was appointed governor of New South Wales in 1824. While William was enlisted as a civil engineer and Deputy Surveyor General, his brother Henry was Military Secretary to Governor Darling. In return for his services, the latter was granted a 12,000 acre-estate at St. Helier's in Muswellbrook. The identification of the present scene as "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese", on the label to the reverse is therefore probably wrong and it is more likely to be of Australia.
Dumaresq Henryview full entry
Reference: see Cheffins Auction UK, 12-13 June, 2019, lot 126: Captain William Dumaresq (1793-1868) and Colonel Henry Dumaresq (1792-1838) "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese, the river Neville in the foreground", watercolour, 22 x 33 cm (8.5 x 13in); together with a watercolour by Agnes Dumaresq, 1887, inscribed verso "Villars, Rhone Valley, Suisse", 12.5 x 17.5 cm (5 x 7in) (2)
Provenance: The Dumaresq family and by descent Other Notes: The brothers, Captain William and Colonel Henry Dumaresq, were both stationed in the colony of New South Wales, Australia. William was a brother-in-law to General (Sir) Ralph Darling, who was appointed governor of New South Wales in 1824. While William was enlisted as a civil engineer and Deputy Surveyor General, his brother Henry was Military Secretary to Governor Darling. In return for his services, the latter was granted a 12,000 acre-estate at St. Helier's in Muswellbrook. The identification of the present scene as "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese", on the label to the reverse is therefore probably wrong and it is more likely to be of Australia.
Dumaresq Agnesview full entry
Reference: see Cheffins Auction UK, 12-13 June, 2019, lot 126: Captain William Dumaresq (1793-1868) and Colonel Henry Dumaresq (1792-1838) "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese, the river Neville in the foreground", watercolour, 22 x 33 cm (8.5 x 13in); together with a watercolour by Agnes Dumaresq, 1887, inscribed verso "Villars, Rhone Valley, Suisse", 12.5 x 17.5 cm (5 x 7in) (2)
Provenance: The Dumaresq family and by descent Other Notes: The brothers, Captain William and Colonel Henry Dumaresq, were both stationed in the colony of New South Wales, Australia. William was a brother-in-law to General (Sir) Ralph Darling, who was appointed governor of New South Wales in 1824. While William was enlisted as a civil engineer and Deputy Surveyor General, his brother Henry was Military Secretary to Governor Darling. In return for his services, the latter was granted a 12,000 acre-estate at St. Helier's in Muswellbrook. The identification of the present scene as "Les Trois Couronnes, Pyrenese", on the label to the reverse is therefore probably wrong and it is more likely to be of Australia.
Blogg John Kendrick 1851-1936view full entry
Reference: see Gibsons Auction, Melbourne, 16 June, 2019, lot 22:
Property from the Estate of John K. Blogg
John Kendrick Blogg (1851 – 1936) 22
Industrial chemist, wood-carver and poet, John K. Blogg was born in Toronto, Canada and migrated to Victoria in 1877, establishing the prosperous Melbourne chemical manufacturing firm J. K. Blogg and Company.
He was a fine woodcarver and furniture maker who settled and worked in Surrey Hills in the early 1900s. He is particularly well- known for his WW1 memorials and honour boards, the most significant of which is The Shrine in the Surrey Gardens. Others were made for the Surrey Hills Primary School, local churches and the Surrey Hills Bowling Club, of which Blogg was a keen member.
Blogg was also known for his poetry and wrote many poems about
roses, WW1 and Surrey Hills. His papers are held in the National $6,000–8,000

lot 23
23
An Australian cedar fall front secretaire desk and chair, circa 1880
144cm high, 91cm wide, 60cm deep
PROVENANCE
By descent from the family of John K. Blogg
NOTE
This secretaire desk and chair were used by John K Blogg throughout his life and latter years writing poetry and sketching his designs for his wood carvings
$2,000–3,000

24
JOHN KENDRICK BLOGG
(1851-1936)
Blackwood chair with carved panel the crest rail panel 41 x 10cm
PROVENANCE
By descent from the family of John K. Blogg
$6,000–8,000
25
A framed insurance document for Mr John K. Blogg from the Commercial Union Assurance Company Limited issued on the 1st September 1890
for cover of 'household furniture and effects...situate Albany Crescent, Surrey Hills in the amount of one hundred twenty five pounds sterling'
the certificate 52 x 42cm
$100–200

27
JOHN KENDRICK BLOGG (1851-1936)
'Old Cronies'
panel carved in high relief
with gum nuts and gum leaves inscribed 'Old Cronies' upper right signed John K. Blogg and dated 1929 lower right
56.5 x 29cm
PROVENANCE
By descent from the family of John K. Blogg
$8,000–10,000

lot 31 large carved frame with tapestry insert signed verso John K. Blogg and
dated 1905 lower right
69.5 x 58cm

Gould William Buelowview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons Auction, Melbourne, 16 June, 2019 lot
151
WILLIAM BUELOW GOULD (1803-1853)
Still Life with Pheasant, circa 1846
oil on canvas 57 x 47cm
PROVENANCE
Sotheby's Melbourne, Fine Australian Books, Paintings and Drawings, 15-16th April 1985, Lot 43
LITERATURE
Darby G. William, Buelow Gould, Convict Artist of Van Diemensland, Copperfield Press, Sydney, 1980, colour plate 5, page 86
$18,000–25,000
William Buelow Gould (1801-1853), artist, was born in Liverpool, England. He is said to have been a porcelain painter at Spode's factory, a pupil of William Mulready, R.A., and to have worked for Rudolph Ackermann in the Strand. By 1826 he was married with two children, and on 7 November of that year he was charged at Northampton quarter sessions with having by 'force of arms stolen one coat' and was sentenced to 'seven years beyond the seas'. He had a previous conviction for stealing 'colours'.
He arrived at Hobart Town in the Asia in December 1827 and was sent to work at the brickfields. His record in Van Diemen's Land was never good, frequent offences being stealing and drunkenness. In June 1829 he was sentenced to three years at Macquarie Harbour for passing a forged Derwent Bank note. He was sent in the brig Cyprus. While weather-bound in Recherche Bay half the convicts mutinied and took the brig. The other convicts, including Gould, were marooned with
the officers. Gould was one of a party which went overland to obtain help. Lieutenant-Governor (Sir) George Arthur ameliorated the sentences of the obedient convicts, and Gould was assigned to Dr James Scott, colonial surgeon. While with Scott he painted botanical specimens which are perfect in technical detail. In 1832, after more offences, Gould was again sentenced to Macquarie Harbour where he
150
AILEEN DENT (1890-1979)
Untitled (Still Life with Petunias)
oil on canvas
signed upper right: Aileen Dent 77 x 63.5cm
$600–800
151
WILLIAM BUELOW GOULD (1803-1853)
Still Life with Pheasant, circa 1846
oil on canvas 57 x 47cm
PROVENANCE
Sotheby's Melbourne, Fine Australian Books, Paintings and Drawings, 15-16th April 1985, Lot 43
LITERATURE
Darby G. William, Buelow Gould, Convict Artist of Van Diemensland, Copperfield Press, Sydney, 1980, colour plate 5, page 86
$18,000–25,000
painted many more exquisite water-colours of flowers, birds and fishes. His sketches of Macquarie Harbour itself provide a unique topographical record of the settlement. When the Macquarie Harbour penal settlement was abandoned Gould was sent to Port Arthur, where he received his certificate of freedom on 25 June 1835.
After working briefly for Henry Palmer, coachbuilder, of Launceston, he returned to Hobart, where in December 1836 he married Ann Reynolds. In the next years he painted many game, fish and flower studies in oils, some good, some indifferent. He became a confirmed drunkard and, between sentences, lived with his wife and family in abject poverty. He died on 11 December 1853 from natural causes at his home in Macquarie Street.
A self-portrait hangs in the Tasmanian Museum. Examples of his work are held by the Entally National House, Franklin House, the National Trust Home, the Narryna Folk Museum, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery of Launceston, the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, and private owners.
Gould's Sketchbook of Fishes was inscribed on the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Register on 1 April 2011.
– Australian Dictionary of Biography Online
Lowe Georginaview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons Auction, Melbourne, 16 June, 2019 lot
153
GEORGIANA LOWE (CIRCA 1813-1884)
View from the Parsonage,
Port Macquarie, Looking
up the 'Lagune'
watercolour, sepia and pencil on paper inscribed lower centre: View from the Parsonage, Port Macquarie, Looking up the 'Lagune'
25.5 x 17cm
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Melbourne
By descent Sandra MacArthur-Onslow Family, Canberra
$3,000–5,000
Perry Samuel Augustusview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons Auction, Melbourne, 16 June, 2019 lot

164
SAMUEL AUGUSTUS PERRY (1791-1854)
View of the Valley of Roseau,
Dominica
watercolour
signed and inscribed verso: S A Perry
/ View of the Valley of Rousseau or Queen's River in the Island of Dominica with the cascade and mountain
called Morne Verte. / The columns of smoke near the right are Souffrieres.
/ Sketched one morning before breakfast.
10.5 x 15cm
PROVENANCE
Sotheby's, Fine Australian Paintings, Melbourne, April 19 1993, Lot 138 Sandra McArthur Onslow, Canberra
REFERENCE
Jillian Oppenheimer, Perry Soldier and Surveyor, Samuel Augustus Perry, 1791-1854 Deputy Surveyor General, New South Wales, Deputy Surveyor General, New South Wales, printed
by Ligare Pty., Ltd., 2009, page 145, Illustrated colour pl.9
NOTE
Samuel Augustus Perry was a watercolourist, surveyor and soldier. Appointed deputy Surveyor-General of New South Wales, he arrived in Australia in 1829. Perry, with Captain William Dumaresq, was responsible for returning to Venice the four bronze horses of St Mark's which Napoleon had removed to Paris.
$1,500–2,500
Bush Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons Auction, Melbourne, 16 June, 2019 lot
169
CHARLES BUSH (1919–1989)
Ruins of Market Building,
Bacau, Port Timor circa 1945
oil on cardboard
signed (sgraffitoed) lower right:
Bush and sign titled and signed verso: RUINS OF MARKET BUILDING BAUCAU - PORT TIMOR / Charles Bush
24 x 20cm
NOTE
Charles Bush was a war artist in WWII, painting in Papua New Guinea and Timor (after the liberation from the Japanese) Bacau is on the the coast
in what is now Timor ""Este. It seems this market building, with Portuguese architectural influence, is still to be seen in Bacau.
PROVENANCE
inscribed verso:
Given by Charles Bush to
William Pettigrew (army friend)
to Ian Hough (m. to Lucy H.) bequest to Bruce Wilson; bequest to Robert/Jean/Alison Wilson
further inscribed in note:
This painting was given by the artist Charles Bush to his army friend William Pettigrew, who gave it to my friend Ian Hough. On Ian's death his widow, Lucy gave it to me Bruce Wilson
$1,000–1,500
Corbet Edith (1850-1920)view full entry
Reference: see DREWEATTS UK auction, 31 July, 2019, lot 150: Edith Corbet (British 1850-1920) The late Mrs. Charles Stuart-Wortley Oil on paper laid down to canvas 40.5 x 33.5cm (15¾ x 13 in.) Painted in 1879. Provenance: Gifted by the artist to Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley after Beatrice Stuart-Worsley's (née Trollope) death in 1881 Thence by descent to Hon. Beatrice Susan Theodosia Gascoyne-Cecil (née Stuart-Wortley) Thence by descent to Robert Arthur Gascoyne-Cecil, Assistant to the Director of the Wallace Collection in 1946 Alice, daughter of Susan Charlotte Buchan, Baroness Tweedsmuir (née Grosvenor; 20 April 1882 - 21 March 1977) Thence by descent to the present owner Exhibited: London, Grosvenor Gallery, 1 May - 31 July 1883, no. 167 This work, depicting the late Mrs. Charles Stuart-Wortley, was hung in the East Gallery at the Grosvenor Gallery alongside an additional portrait by Mrs. Arthur Murch, Portrait of Lady Paget. These portraits were in good company alongside works by artists including Stanhope Forbes, Charles Napier Hemy and Heywood Hardy. Altogether Mrs Arthur Murch exhibited five works of art in the Grosvenor Gallery in the May exhibition of 1883. Edith Corbet (née Edenborough) formerly Edith Murch. Edith was born in Goulburn, New South Wales, Australia the second daughter and fifth child of Henry Edenborough and Margaret Stedman. The family originally from Leicestershire relocated to London and became successful silk merchants. Edith married Victorian painter and illustrator Arthur Murch with whom she moved to Rome and began painting with Giovanni Costa, leader of the Macchiaioli group. She frequently exhibited from 1880 to 1890 at the Grosvenor Gallery and the New Gallery. In 1891, after the death of her first husband, she married Matthew Ridley Corbet, one of the Macchiaioli group's leading members, after which she exhibited mainly at the Royal Academy, visiting Italy and living in London for the remainder of her life. Beatrice Stuart-Worsley (née Trollope) was the daughter of Thomas Adolphus Trollope and Theodosia Garrow. In 1880 she married Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley (1851-1926), son of Rt. Hon. James Archibald Stuart-Wortley and Hon. Jane Lawley. Together they had one daughter Hon. Beatrice Susan Theodosia Stuart-Wortley (1881-1973). Beatrice Stuart-Worsley died on 26th July 1881. To be sold together with letters from (Mary) Rosalie Glynn Grylls (13 April 1905 - 2 November 1988), later Lady Mander to Robert Cecil and from Susan Charlotte Buchan, Baroness Tweedsmuir (née Grosvenor; 20 April 1882 - 21 March 1977) to Robert Cecil. Finally from, Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley to his sister Mary Caroline Stuart-Wortley regarding an exhibition.
Murch Mrs Arthur - Edith Corbet (1850-1920)view full entry
Reference: see DREWEATTS UK auction, 31 July, 2019, lot 150: Edith Corbet (British 1850-1920) The late Mrs. Charles Stuart-Wortley Oil on paper laid down to canvas 40.5 x 33.5cm (15¾ x 13 in.) Painted in 1879. Provenance: Gifted by the artist to Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley after Beatrice Stuart-Worsley's (née Trollope) death in 1881 Thence by descent to Hon. Beatrice Susan Theodosia Gascoyne-Cecil (née Stuart-Wortley) Thence by descent to Robert Arthur Gascoyne-Cecil, Assistant to the Director of the Wallace Collection in 1946 Alice, daughter of Susan Charlotte Buchan, Baroness Tweedsmuir (née Grosvenor; 20 April 1882 - 21 March 1977) Thence by descent to the present owner Exhibited: London, Grosvenor Gallery, 1 May - 31 July 1883, no. 167 This work, depicting the late Mrs. Charles Stuart-Wortley, was hung in the East Gallery at the Grosvenor Gallery alongside an additional portrait by Mrs. Arthur Murch, Portrait of Lady Paget. These portraits were in good company alongside works by artists including Stanhope Forbes, Charles Napier Hemy and Heywood Hardy. Altogether Mrs Arthur Murch exhibited five works of art in the Grosvenor Gallery in the May exhibition of 1883. Edith Corbet (née Edenborough) formerly Edith Murch. Edith was born in Goulburn, New South Wales, Australia the second daughter and fifth child of Henry Edenborough and Margaret Stedman. The family originally from Leicestershire relocated to London and became successful silk merchants. Edith married Victorian painter and illustrator Arthur Murch with whom she moved to Rome and began painting with Giovanni Costa, leader of the Macchiaioli group. She frequently exhibited from 1880 to 1890 at the Grosvenor Gallery and the New Gallery. In 1891, after the death of her first husband, she married Matthew Ridley Corbet, one of the Macchiaioli group's leading members, after which she exhibited mainly at the Royal Academy, visiting Italy and living in London for the remainder of her life. Beatrice Stuart-Worsley (née Trollope) was the daughter of Thomas Adolphus Trollope and Theodosia Garrow. In 1880 she married Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley (1851-1926), son of Rt. Hon. James Archibald Stuart-Wortley and Hon. Jane Lawley. Together they had one daughter Hon. Beatrice Susan Theodosia Stuart-Wortley (1881-1973). Beatrice Stuart-Worsley died on 26th July 1881. To be sold together with letters from (Mary) Rosalie Glynn Grylls (13 April 1905 - 2 November 1988), later Lady Mander to Robert Cecil and from Susan Charlotte Buchan, Baroness Tweedsmuir (née Grosvenor; 20 April 1882 - 21 March 1977) to Robert Cecil. Finally from, Charles Beilby Stuart-Wortley, 1st and last Baron Stuart of Wortley to his sister Mary Caroline Stuart-Wortley regarding an exhibition.
Doyly-John Charles Robert (Australia 1906 - 1993)view full entry
Reference: see SAARBRÜCKER KUNST- UND auction, lot 980120, 27 July, 2019:
Doyly-John, Charles Robert (Australia 1906 - 1993), Old archway, probably St. Tropez, oil on board, on hardboard doubled, framed under glass, frame partially bumped, on the back with exhibition label, labeled John Doyly, Ch. Robert, Old archway, picture size 44 x 63 cm, frame size 51 x 70 cm. 1595-023
Whittaker Tview full entry
Reference: see Bourgeault-Horan Antiquarians
August 18, 2019, 12:00 PM EST
Portsmouth, NH, US lot 107: Lot 107: T. WHITTAKER (AUSTRALIAN, ACT. MID-NINETEENTH CENTURY). LETTER FROM HOME. Description: Oil on canvas, 24 1/4 x 20 1/4 inches. Signed "T. Whittaker" and dated 1865, l.l. The title inscribed in pencil on the stretcher and on the reverse of the canvas, "T. Whittaker/ Wilson Place/ Port Broughton." Provenance: Collection of J. Welles Henderson, Philadelphia. Literature: Discussed and illustrated in J. Welles Henderson and Rodney P. Carlisle, "Jack Tar: A Sailor's Life 1750-1910," pp. 70-71. However, no biographical information on the artist is provided in this book.
Whittaker Tview full entry
Reference: see Small & Whitfield auction, Adelaide, 12.10.2009, Children Gathering Hay, 33 x 28 cm, 1865.
Colahan Colinview full entry
Reference: see McTears auction UK, 28 August, 2019, lot 409: COLIN COLAHAN (AUSTRALIAN 1897 - 1987) THE EMERALD NECKLACE oil on canvas, signed 76cm x 63cm Framed. Label verso: E-Stacy Marks Ltd, 120-122 Terminus Road, Eastbourne, Sussex. Note: Colin Cuthbert Orr Colahan was an Australian painter and sculptor of Irish descent. Between 1921-27 he lived and traveled in England, France and Spain , studied the classical masters and developed his technique, showing his work in London and Paris. He returned to Melbourne, where his reputation grew and his work matured. His subjects included landscapes, streetscapes, portraits and nude studies. In 1935 Colahan suddenly departed again for England, where he built a reputation as a portrait painter. His more notable subjects included George Bernard Shaw. Colahan was appointed an Australian official war artist in 1942 and became the first president of the Australian Artists’ Association, London, in 1952. Moving to Italy in 1958, Colahan continued to paint portraits and landscapes, and in the late 1960s he turned to sculpture, producing over thirty works, including the `Sirena’ fountain for the Italian town of Bordighera, and a head of Victor Smorgon, bought by the National Gallery of Victoria. A portrait in oil of F. Matthias Alexander (of “Alexander technique” fame), painted by Colahan to commemorate the subject’s 80th birthday, was shown on the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow program in May 2013. His work can be found in the collections of the State galleries of Melbourne, Adelaide and Brisbane.
Lawler Adrianview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
LOT 221
Adrian Lawlor
(1890-1969)
Nude in Archway (Banner of Blood), c.1940

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


Adrian Lawlor (1890-1969)
Nude in Archway (Banner of Blood), c.1940
signed lower right: ADRIAN / LAWLOR'
titled verso: 'NUDE IN ARCHWAY'
oil on composition board
55.0 x 44.0cm (21 5/8 x 17 5/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney

EXHIBITED
Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, May 1940

LITERATURE
'The Art of Adrian Lawlor' in Art in Australia, series 3, no. 80, August 1940, pp. 18, 19 (illus.) as Banner of Blood, Painted on receiving a Poem from Alister Kershaw as now in the possession of Warwick Fairfax, Esq

In the mid 1930s, John Fairfax & Sons Ltd acquired both The Home magazine and Art in Australia, which had established itself as the leading publication for modern and Australian art. The following is an excerpt from a review published anonymously in the August 1940 edition.

'Although he held his first one-man show little more than ten years ago, Adrian Lawlor has a rightful place amongst the pioneers of the modern movement in Australia.

In those days, he was far from unknown as a writer with a vital and highly personal style, who had contributed to leading Australian journals. His exhibition of paintings early in 1930 marked him as an artist who had something to say, and who was determined to say it in his own way.

The exhibition burst like a high explosive shell in the midst of Melbourne's slumbering art world. Here was an artist who believed that a painting, in order to be a work of art, must be something more than a coloured photograph, a sentimental likeness of a suburban street, or "Portrait of Alderman So-and-so in robes of office." Lawlor dared to place himself on the platform with European artists and critics, who considered that the post-impressionists and the men of his own day - Picasso, Braque, Matisse - produced art, while the painters of Highland cattle and "The Deathbed" did not.

He was attacked from all sides by painters and members of the general public, who rushed into print through the daily press with long and wordy letters. Lawlor countered each onslaught, defending his own work and championing the cause of the contemporary movement.

Since then he has been to the forefront in all those "anti-modern versus modern" controversies which seem to occur and reoccur with clock-like precision in Melbourne.

His annual one-man shows have continued to disturb Melbourne's leaders of academic thought, and his exhibitions are eagerly awaited by those who expect an artist to be creative and stimulating with his brushes...

Passing from these formal paintings, we can select another group of related works which is probably of more intrinsic worth than all of the others, in that it exemplifies more particularly and more deeply the personal vision of the artist. These pictures are "Banner of Blood", "Symphonic Poem" (No 21), "A Melodrama" and "Theatre" (No 62). Though uneven in execution, and in the extent to which they carry this special inspiration, each of these paintings can be related through the air of haunting unreality and mystery which pervades them. The blood-like paint used (except in "Theatre") is possibly responsible for a certain feeling of uneasiness which they evoke, but their emotional appeal in undoubted, even though their aesthetic analysis may be involved. This does not negate the value of the paintings, but rather assures us once more that the artist has something welling up in him which cannot fail to be a valuable contribution to Australian art.'
O’Connor Vicview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
LOT 220
Victor George
(Vic) O'Connor (1918-2010)
The Acrobats, 1941

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


Victor George (Vic) O'Connor (1918-2010)
The Acrobats, 1941
signed and dated lower right: 'VG O'Connor 41'
oil on canvas on composition board
60.0 x 75.0cm (23 5/8 x 29 1/2in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
David Jones Gallery, Sydney
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1941

EXHIBITED
Contemporary Art Society, Third Annual Exhibition, David Jones Gallery, Sydney, 9 September - 4 October 1941; then Hotel Australia, Melbourne, 14 - 31 October 1941, cat. 168

LITERATURE
'Contemporary Art: Vital Works at Annual Show', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 9 September 1941, p. 7
Richard Haese, Rebels and Precursors, The Revolutionary Years of Australian Art, Penguin Books, Melbourne, 1981, p. 87
Richard Haese, Modern Australian Art, Alpine Fine Arts Collection, 1982, p. 87
Bernard Smith, Noel Counihan: Artist and Revolutionary, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1993, p. 170
Keith Richmond, 'A Painter of Ordinary Life', Oz Arts, issue nine, 1994, p. 59 (illus.)
Janine Burke, Australian Gothic: A Life of Albert Tucker, Random House, Sydney, 2002, p. 170

Formed in 1938, the Contemporary Art Society held its first exhibition in 1939. Exhibiting artists included Noel Counihan, Russell Drysdale, Sidney Nolan and Albert Tucker. Through the encouragement of friend David Strachan, Vic O'Connor joined the Society and entered a landscape into the 1939 exhibition. It was to be a turning point for O'Connor. As described by Keith Richmond in his article in OZ Arts magazine, 'The C.A.S. comprised most of the younger artists of the period - figures like Bell, Arnold Shaw, Frater, Drysdale, Dobell and Gleeson, as well as traditional artists. The C.A.S. was founded in July 1938 to 'unite all artists and laymen who are in favour of encouraging the growth of a living art', in opposition to the then-current idea of the creation of an officially sanctioned 'self-constituted Academy'.

For a time the Society flourished, with branches in Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney, but as the threat of an academy vanished differences arose between the various
groups who had joined the movement. The Bell group was the first to leave as they
were opposed to the part lay people played in the Society. The quarrel developed between Bell and a group around John and Sunday Reed - an avant garde circle which included Albert Tucker, Sidney Nolan, Arthur Boyd and John Perceval. The third group comprised those later termed the Social Realists: Noel Counihan, Vic O'Connor and Yosl Bergner.

It was in the early 1940s that Social Realism gained prominence in Australian art,
largely due to the Communist Party's stand against fascism and the entry into the
war in 1941 of the USSR. Many of its practitioners had bitter memories of the
Depression; they had also found entry to the art world a stony path indeed, and
were sympathetic to socialism and communism. Further, the evolution of Australian
society had shifted the main emphasis from the life and appearance of rural
Australia to the city.

While Vic says the term Social Realist was usually applied to Counihan, Bergner
and himself, to identify them as a group, 'we were, however, each quite different
from the other. Bergner's work reflected Jewish hopes and fears at that time.
Counihan had a record of achievement as a political cartoonist, and when he
began to paint, his work reflected his close association with working-class leftwing action. I was less sophisticated and had to find my way to my subjects. I was more of an instinctive painter.'

'If you look at my pictures, you'll see a lot of them have political or social connotations of some kind or other, but my approach tends to be from side on. I don't think pictures up. Images come into my mind pretty well formed with what I want to do. It's always been like that.'

Of the days in the C.A.S, O'Connor remembers that despite the differences in the
art world, there was still a lot of camaraderie between individuals. 'At one period,
there would be a Sunday afternoon get-together when we'd take along whatever
we were working on and prop the pictures against the wall, have a bit of grog
and the whole place would buzz with lively discussion.'

In 1941, Vic entered a painting, The Acrobats, in the C.A.S. exhibition and
shared a fifty pound prize with Donald Friend. In The Acrobats, he tried to convey the brooding feeling of the cityscape: 'I was in the city continually, and in the immediate pre-war era the mood in the streets was often disturbing, with an
atmosphere of violence. I used to feel there was an alienation - some degree of
alienation between people. It is reflected in drawings I did of the city at that time, and it is what I sought to express in The Acrobats - the isolation, the unsettled atmosphere and the divisions between people.'
Lymburner Francisview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
Various works by Lymburner including:
LOT 59
Francis Lymburner
(1916-1972)
The Rehearsal Group, c.1944
Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


Francis Lymburner (1916-1972)
The Rehearsal Group, c.1944
signed lower right: 'Francis Lymburner'
oil on composition board
48.0 x 57.0cm (18 7/8 x 22 7/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Macquarie Gallery, Sydney
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax

EXHIBITED
Francis Lymburner, Macquarie Galleries, 28 June - 10 July 1944, cat. 3, as kindly lent by Warwick Fairfax, Esq.
Francis Lymburner Retrospective, touring exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 4 April - 24 May 1992; Newcastle Art Gallery, Newcastle, 12 June – 12 July 1992; Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, 28 July – 13 September 1992; Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 26 September – 22 November 1992; Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, Bathurst, 4 December 1992 – 31 January 1993, cat. 5 (label attached verso)

LITERATURE
Paul Haefliger, 'Art of Francis Lymburner', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 29 June 1944
Hendrik Kolenberg and Barry Pearce, Francis Lymburner, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1992, cat. 5, p. 37 (illus.)
Bunny Rupertview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
Various works by Rupert Bunny including
LOT 78
Rupert Bunny
(1864-1947)
The Wrath of Apollo, c.1918

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


Rupert Bunny (1864-1947)
The Wrath of Apollo, c.1918
oil on linen
51.0 x 73.0cm (20 1/16 x 28 3/4in).
linen stamped verso with artist supplier Lucien Lefebvre-Foinet, Paris
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Mrs Montague Grover, Melbourne
K. Grover Esq., Melbourne
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney

EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings by Rupert Bunny, Georges Gallery, Melbourne, 9 - 19 September 1947, cat. 26 (label attached verso)

LITERATURE
Clive Turnbull and Tristan Buesst, The Art of Rupert Bunny, Ure Smith, Sydney 1948, p. 75
David Thomas, Rupert Bunny 1864-1947, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1970, cat. O208
David Thomas, The Life and Art of Rupert Bunny: A Catalogue Raisonné, Thames and Hudson, Melbourne, 2017, O501

Exhibited in late 1947, just a few months after Rupert Bunny's death, The Wrath of Apollo belongs to a group of paintings from the latter part of his career which Bunny called 'mythological decorations.' Filled with vibrancy and brilliance, they are his most individual contributions to art. The exhibition was reviewed by The Age art critic who wrote 'When Bunny died some months ago a chapter in Australia's early art history was closed. He was one of several distinguished artists who contributed to the foundation of a national culture.

A cosmopolitan in outlook and habit, with a cosmopolitan's receptivity to movements in taste, Bunny's versatile ability was admirably qualified to respond to and record the diversity in art movements that arose during his long lifetime.

His fastidious taste in colour and design is reflected in a number of mythological compositions of which At the Well (I) is a conspicuous example. It is in these pictures that the artist reveals his literary-musical sensibilities, and it is to the musician with an unerring sense of harmony no less than to the artist that we owe a debt of gratitude for his elegant unity of colour relationship and intricacies of design.

Bunny's art had limitations, a lack of depth due to his response to the vagaries of the moment. Nevertheless, within these limits his work neared perfection of its kind, and that is all we may demand from any artist.'

We gratefully acknowledge the kind assistance of David Thomas in cataloguing this work.
Cardamatis Wolfgangview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
Two works by Cardamatis including
LOT 145
J. Wolfgang Cardamatis
(born 1917)
Young Bride, 1941

AU$ 800 - 1,200
£ 440 - 660
FOLLOW

Bid

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


J. Wolfgang Cardamatis (born 1917)
Young Bride, 1941
signed and dated lower left: 'J W Cardamatis 1941'
gouache on card on board
44.0 x 54.0cm (17 5/16 x 21 1/4in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
David Jones Gallery, Sydney
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1941

EXHIBITED
Contemporary Art Society, Third Annual Exhibition, David Jones Gallery, Sydney, 9 September - 4 October 1941, cat. 33

LITERATURE
Art in Australia, series 4, no. 4, December 1941 - February 1942, p. 61 (illus.)
'Serene House at Bondi Beach', Vogue Australia, June/July 1967, p. 107 (illus. in situ)

AND

J. Wolfgang Cardamatis (born 1917)
The Annunciation, 1945
signed and dated lower left: 'CARDAMATIS 45'
gouache on paper
24.0 x 19.0cm (9 7/16 x 7 1/2in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired before 1954
Smith Ericview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
Two works by Smith:
LOT 174
Eric Smith
(1919-2017)
The Kiss of Judas, 1952

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


Eric Smith (1919-2017)
The Kiss of Judas, 1952
signed and dated lower right: 'ERIC SMITH '52'
artist's label attached verso
oil on composition board
70.0 x 59.0cm (27 9/16 x 23 1/4in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired before 1954

EXHIBITED
Contemporary Art Society, Fourteenth Annual Interstate Exhibition Sydney, 1 - 17 November 1952, cat. 110
Exhibition of Paintings, Eric Smith, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 17 - 30 March 1953, cat. 7
Blake Prize 1953 Mark Foys Gallery, Sydney, 9 - 30 April 1953, cat. 71

LITERATURE
'Contemporary Art Exhibition', The Sydney Morning Herald, 1 November 1952, p. 2
'At Sydney Galleries: Contemporary Art Society', Le Courrier Australien, Sydney, 14 November 1952, p. 5
'Exhibition of works by Eric Smith', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 17 March 1953, p. 2
'At Sydney Galleries: Six Artists at the Mack Galleries', Le Courrier Australien, Sydney, 27 March 1953, p. 5
'Blake Prize Paintings Have Power', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 8 April 1953, p. 2
'At Sydney Galleries: Blake Prize, 1953', Le Courrier Australien, Sydney, 17 April 1953, p. 5

AND
lot 175
Eric Smith (1919-2017)
The Raising of Lazarus, 1953
signed and dated lower right: ERIC SMITH / 53
oil on composition board
91.0 x 82.0cm (35 13/16 x 32 5/16in).
Footnotes
inscribed verso then over-painted: 'CONT ART SOCIETY / THE RAISING OF LAZARUS'

PROVENANCE
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired before 1954

EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings, Eric Smith, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 17 - 30 March 1953, cat. 8
An Exhibition of Paintings by Eric Smith, John Martins Gallery, Adelaide, 27 September 1954, cat. 6

LITERATURE
'Eric Smith's Exhibition Impressive', The Sun, Sydney, 17 March 1953, p. 11
'Exhibition of Works by Eric Smith', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 17 March 1953, p. 2
Elizabeth Young, 'Eric Smith Art Show "Sincere"', The Advertiser, Adelaide, 27 September 1954
Peacock Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Bonham’s auction, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra.
Two works by Peacock
LOT 198
George Edwards Peacock
(Australian, 1806-1890)
Port Jackson, New South Wales, View in Double Bay, looking towards St George's and Middle Heads, Morning, 1847

Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE
22 Sep 2019, 13:00 EST
Sydney, Woollahra


George Edwards Peacock (Australian, 1806-1890)
Port Jackson, New South Wales, View in Double Bay, looking towards St George's and Middle Heads, Morning, 1847
titled, signed and dated on card verso
oil on card
13.5 x 19.0cm (5 5/16 x 7 1/2in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Christies, Sydney, 3 October 1973, lot 407
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney

Once a Yorkshire middle class solicitor, transported for forgery who later became a meteorologist, George Edwards Peacock arrived in Sydney aboard the Prince George on 8 May 1837. By 1846, he had received a conditional pardon though keenly felt his social disgrace and sought redemption through his work as an artist. Indeed, his oil paintings of Sydney Harbour from c.1844 - 1857 depict an idyll of leisure and beauty. Finely drawn with an amazing eye for the delicate and considered, whilst the details of Peacock's formal art training are not known, his competence suggest English training. The majority of his works are now held in the collection of State Library of New South Wales and document the harbour foreshores with its elegant villas and stately homes.

At the time, the beaches and inlets accessible from South Head road around the south of the harbour were considered the most picturesque with the northern shore generally held to be wild and dry. Catering in part to his own taste and that of his collectors, Peacock's works are focused almost exclusively on the area along with some which document prominent buildings in town. Painted primarily in oil on card, Peacock's confidence grew into the early 1850s when he commenced signing his work to the face. These examples, both earlier, have detailed notations in ink to cards attached verso.

The works he produced with their fine notations are the main record we have of Peacock's life. After 1856 he disappears from view and neither the date or place of his death are known.

Merryn Schriever
and 199
George Edwards Peacock (Australian, 1806-1890)
Port Jackson, a View from Lady Darling's Point, North West, 1847
signed, dated and titled on card verso
oil on card
14.0 x 19.0cm (5 1/2 x 7 1/2in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Christies, Sydney, 3 October 1973, lot 408
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney




Open Air: Portraits In The Landscape view full entry
Reference: Open Air: Portraits In The Landscape, (’This was the exhibition that opened Australia's new National Portrait Gallery. It centred on the theme of 'landscape as portrait'’) [To be indexed]
Publishing details: National Portrait Gallery, Canberra 2008, 72pp, colour illusts, fine paperback with French flaps
Landscape as portraitview full entry
Reference: see Open Air: Portraits In The Landscape, (’This was the exhibition that opened Australia's new National Portrait Gallery. It centred on the theme of 'landscape as portrait'’)
Publishing details: National Portrait Gallry, Canberra 2008, 72pp, colour illusts, fine paperback with French flaps
Done Ken
view full entry
Reference: Ken Done: Paintings You Probably Haven't Seen: Selected Works 2000-2017, by Sarah Engledow. Contents: artist statement, introduction, plates, exhibition history, collections & awards, select bibliography, index.
Publishing details: Ken Done Gallery Sydney 2017, 228pp, colour illust, hardcover in dustjacket,
Ref: 1000
Jeffreys Leilaview full entry
Reference: Bird Love - Leila Jeffreys (photographer), by Sarah Engledow (author of introduction) [’Fine art photographer Leila Jeffreys captures the beauty and diversity of some of our most colourful and elegant feathered friends. From the birds of her native Australia to North America, Jeffreys seems to see into the very souls of these model-like creatures with her stunning and evocative portraits.Jeffreys works with animal rescue and conservation groups to find subjects to photograph. Her love and compassion for her subjects is evident throughout, and she captures their personalities in her delightful portraits: Commander Skyring the Gang-Gang Cockatoo, Dexter the White-Bellied Sea Eagle, Mrs. Plume the Budgerigar and friends, are as delightfully whimsical as they are beautiful.’]

Publishing details: Abrams & Chronicle Books Nov 2015,
208 pp.
Ref: 1000
Fox Belindaview full entry
Reference: Belinda Fox - You need the light to cast a shadow. Exhibition invite with brief essay and 5 colour illustrations.
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2019, 6pp folding card
Ref: 1000
Australian Ex Libris Society Journalview full entry
Reference: Australian Ex Libris Society Journal no 1, Syd. 1930. 8vo. wrapps. 52pp. Includes 7 tipped-in plates including 3 by Norman Lindsay & 9 ills of bookplates including 5 by Norman Lindsay. Fine. One of 300 numbered copies. Contains an article “The Bookplate Work of Norman Lindsay” by Hugh McCrae.
Publishing details: Australian Ex Libris Society Journal no 1, Syd. 1930. 8vo. wrapps. 52pp.
Ref: 1000
Ex Libris Society, Australianview full entry
Reference: see Australian Ex Libris Society. [All of their journals to be indexed]
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Blackman - Original Drawings, Graphics and Monoprints from the Private Collection of Barbara Blackman AO

Gibsons Auction, Level 1, 885-889 High Street, Armadale, Victoria 3143, 6-20th September, 2019

This exhibition comprises original graphics made by Charles Blackman during the thirty years of our marriage. Many of these editions were produced by Well House Press which was set up in the back cottage of our house in Paddington to publish drypoints and etchings, with myself as publisher.

In the following years and all through the eighties this collection of original prints was preserved, layered between separate sheets of tissue paper, in an antique cabinet of print drawers, later transferred to a younger cabinet of drawers in the Melbourne apartment of Felicity St John Moore, an authority on Charles  Blackman and the curator of my art collection and this
exhibition. These prints are now emerging from their sheltered lives to find new homes, mostly for the first time.

The exceptions are the monoprints which came to light more recently, tucked into a sheaf of kept papers being archived by the National Library of Australia. Four monoprints from this series have been purchased for the Prints and Drawings collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.

The Mother Goose suite, drypoints by Charles Blackman, was gifted in 1996 to the Peter McCallum Hospital for the Children’s Cancer Ward. The text of these rhymes was researched and supplied by Vida Horne, long-time children’s librarian at St Kilda Library.
Charles Blackman’s works on paper are represented in the collection of The British Museum in London. They include my 2006 gift of early drawings and a set of six lithographs, The Aspendale Papers 1966-67.

Barbara Patterson Blackman AO
Blackman
Original Drawings, Graphics and Monoprints from the Private Collection of Barbara Blackman AO

Enquiries  
Jennifer Gibson
O413 202 520
jennifer.gibson@gibsonsauctions.com.au
Ref: 1000
Kemp Rogerview full entry
Reference: Roger Kemp - Works from the Estate: 1930s - 1960s, 7 - 28 September, 2019, Charles Nodrum Gallery exhibition.
Roger Kemp's paintings of the late 1930s form a small but coherent body of work – one as forward looking and exploratory as any of his Australian contemporaries.  Yet, with the brief exception of a few shown in the extensive, five-gallery retrospective curated by Patrick McCaughey in 1978 (1) they have remained virtually unknown.  Even for a market-watcher like myself, knowledge was restricted to a few small monochromatic studies which occasionally appeared on the secondary market and, with their energy, idiosyncrasy and high level of abstraction, always instigated the obvious questions of "How come?" and "Where from?"
 
The answers are now clearer. Kemp fell into the classic mould of the introspective (in which he was far from alone: the history of the arts is well supplied). Furthermore, he was quiet (to the point of silent) concerning his early life and our current knowledge derives from Christopher Heathcote's later biographical research.  From this we learn that, unlike the Boyds or the Heide set, who formed small clans that were both supportive and critical, Kemp had few artist friends - and his family remember his taste for long, solitary walks.  Music was, and remained, significant. He came from a Methodist background where hymn singing was regular and in his youth he had sung in a choir; in later years, fellow students at the Gallery School remember him occasionally breaking spontaneously into song as he worked at his easel.(2)  From the outset, many paintings were given titles relating to music, and the connection between the musical and visual arts remained significant throughout his career.
 
In the early 20th century, the combination of music and the visual arts had been revolutionised by the Ballets Russes - costumes, choreography, sets  and music all underwent a sea-change. When they came to Melbourne audience response was strong, and Kemp was transfixed - and it's not hard to see why, given his background in both the relevant art forms. The results were unique. First, an expansively high-keyed palette made the ruling traditionalists look stodgy and the emerging modernists (the Bell-Shore group) look politely restrained; even the Angry Penguins of the early 1940s tended to favour a quieter palette. Next, the forms and marks were infused with an electric energy: in many of the ballet works the brushstrokes seem to mirror the muscles of the dancers straining to stretch and leap and spin. On this score they are truly expressionist paintings in their effort to communicate directly those physical tensions. At the same time they can be seen as harbingers of his later abstraction in their shift of emphasis away from the depiction of the visible bodies to the invisible energy itself.  It is also worth noting other interests that informed the work – colour theory (Steiner and Goethe) and theosophy, both of which played a role in the work of Godfrey Miller, with whom he is sometimes compared.

In the mid 1940s there’s a dramatic change of palette.  In the landscapes, day is followed by night, and from the dark nocturnes there soon emerged a purer abstraction that held sway through the 50s and into the 60s.  Here, circles, cruciforms (and, later, bird-forms) appear and the symbolic aspect comes more to the fore: the circle epitomising balance and perfection; the cruciform, the human body; and the dove, flight and freedom.  Composition board and enamel paints allowed for both a larger scale and for the more rigorous patterning for which he is probably best known. In these he seemed to be moving towards a transcendence of both the order and the chaos of the universe – no less – from the microcosm of the atom (and the particles with all those strange names and even stranger behaviours) to the macrocosm of the galaxies (where the seemingly random scatter of stars is now seen as firmly guided and ordered by predictable physical forces).
 
This was to prove the over-riding direction of the artist’s work - and this exhibition, focussing on his first 30 years, briefly maps the steadily diminishing presence of the visible outside world in his paintings - and the equally determined exploration of forms.  But in this task Kemp never became a pure formalist in the Greenbergian sense. He practised what  some have termed 'transcendental abstraction' (3) and others 'symbolic abstraction' (4). In this world, forms don't have meaning in the sense that words have meaning (and definition) - rather, they suggest, via the relationships between the forms, an order or harmony which, being abstract, can never be physically depicted, only evoked.      
 
Charles Nodrum
 
1. Patrick McCaughey, Roger Kemp – Cycles and Directions 1935-1973, exhibition catalogue,
Monash University, Melbourne, 1975
2. Christopher Heathcote, The Art of Roger Kemp, McMillan, Melbourne, 2007,
p 17; 25 
3. Heathcote, op cit.
4. Bernard Smith, Australian Painting, OUP, all eds., chapter 11, p 373-386, passim

Publishing details: Cgharles Nodrum Gallery, 2019
Ref: 1000
Kemp Rogerview full entry
Reference: Roger Kemp Visionary Modernist.
[’Roger Kemp: Visionary Modernist is the first major monograph to chart the development of Kemp’s extraordinary career. Driven by a desire to depict themes beyond the physical world, Australian artist Roger Kemp looked to the cosmos, human movement and metaphysical sources for inspiration. In a career spanning more than forty years, he became a key figure of transcendental abstractionist painting.
This publication includes key works, sketches and archival photographs together with essays by David Hurlston, Christopher Heathcote, Helen Hughes and Michel Kemp, offering diverse perspectives on an innovative and complex artist.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Victoria, 2019, hc, 144pp
Ref: 1009
Costa Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article by the artist on art works that influenced him
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Ohlfsen Doraview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article by Jackie Dun on the artist’s unrealised work.
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Ref: 139
Anderson Sallyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Nicole Kellyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Lett Belemview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Owen Waydeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Rawkins Karleeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Whiteley Brett Travelling Scholarship winnersview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winnersview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the five past Brett Whiteley Travelling Scholarship winners 2003-2017
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Rae Judeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the artist’s entry in the Archibald Prize
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
Flint Prudenceview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine for article on the artist by Gabriella Coslovich
Publishing details: Art Gallery Society of NSW, Sept-Oct 2019.
war artistsview full entry
Reference: see Painting Ghosts - Australian Women Artists in Wartime, by Catherine Speck,
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c2004, 239 p. : col. ill., Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 223-227.
Culliton Lucyview full entry
Reference: see Spectrum Magazine, Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, p8-9 article by Caroline Baum with cover illustration and other illustrations on pges 22-25
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, p8-9
Lydiard Virginiaview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, article by Heath Gilmore on ‘Portrait of an artist as an older student’ with information on 4 artists
Publishing details: SMH, August 31, 2019, p18-19
Dix Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, article by Heath Gilmore on ‘Portrait of an artist as an older student’ with information on 4 artists
Publishing details: SMH, August 31, 2019, p18-19
Watson Justinview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, article by Heath Gilmore on ‘Portrait of an artist as an older student’ with information on 4 artists
Publishing details: SMH, August 31, 2019, p18-19
Fitzgerald Sarahview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, August 31, 2019, article by Heath Gilmore on ‘Portrait of an artist as an older student’ with information on 4 artists
Publishing details: SMH, August 31, 2019, p18-19
Lindsay Norman by Hugh McCraeview full entry
Reference: see Australian Ex Libris Society Journal no 1, Syd. 1930. 8vo. wrapps. 52pp. Includes 7 tipped-in plates including 3 by Norman Lindsay & 9 ills of bookplates including 5 by Norman Lindsay. Fine. One of 300 numbered copies. Contains an article “The Bookplate Work of Norman Lindsay” by Hugh McCrae.
Publishing details: Australian Ex Libris Society Journal no 1, Syd. 1930. 8vo. wrapps. 52pp.
Australian Ex Libris Society Annual Reportview full entry
Reference: AUSTRALIAN EX LIBRIS SOCIETY. ANNUAL REPORT (Period 1930-31). Includes 17 tipped-in bookplates One of 250 numbered copies.
Publishing details: Syd. 1932. 8vo. wrapps. 46pp.
Ref: 1000
Museum for the People Aview full entry
Reference: A Museum for the People by Carolyn Rasmussen. A History of Museum Victoria and its Predecessors, 1854-2000. Includes input from forty-six specialist contributors. [to be indexed] *
Publishing details: Melb. Scribe. 2001. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 423pp. Many col & b/w ills.
Museum Victoria view full entry
Reference: A Museum for the People by Carolyn Rasmussen. A History of Museum Victoria and its Predecessors, 1854-2000. Includes input from forty-six specialist contributors.
Publishing details: Melb. Scribe. 2001. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 423pp. Many col & b/w ills.
Barraband Jacques (1767-1809)view full entry
Reference: Jacques Barraband (1767-1809). Histoire Naturelle des Perroquets.
Publishing details: Paris, 1801-1805.
Ref: 1000
Waite James Clarke 1832-1921view full entry
Reference: see Menzies auction, September 26, 2019, Lot 29: Melbourne 1888 JAMES CLARKE WAITE (1832-1921), Melbourne 1888, oil on canvas, 103.5 x 153.0 cm, signed lower right: J C Waite signed and inscribed on stretcher verso: "Melbourne/ J. C. Waite RBA, Private collection Christie's, Melbourne, 12 March 1971, lot 156 (as Port Melbourne) Mr & Mrs Julian & Miriam Sterling, Melbourne Private collection, Melbourne Centennial International Exhibition, Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 1 August 1888 - 31 January 1889, no.132 J.C. Waite, R.B.A., Guild Hall, Melbourne, 11 April - 2 May 1908, no.2 (as View of Melbourne (Before the Boom) J.C. Waite, Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 31 July 1914 Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 28 February 1920, no.1 (as Yarra, Melbourne) Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Anthony Hordern & Sons, Sydney, 17 September 1921
see Menzies auction 26.9.19, lot 29: LOT 29
JAMES CLARKE WAITE
Melbourne 1888

oil on canvas
103.5 x 153.0 cm

signed lower right: J C Waite
signed and inscribed on stretcher verso: "Melbourne/ J. C. Waite RBA
Provenance:
Private collection
Christie's, Melbourne, 12 March 1971, lot 156 (as Port Melbourne)
Mr & Mrs Julian & Miriam Sterling, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne
Reference:
The Argus, Melbourne, 11 September 1888, p.33
'The Melbourne Exhibition', The Illustrated Sydney News, Sydney, 27 September 1888, p.6
Colquhoun, A., 'Pictures on View. Mr. J.C. Waite Exhibition', The Herald, Melbourne, 16 July 1914, p.10
Colquhoun, A., 'Mr. J.C. Waite's Paintings', The Herald, Melbourne, 16 February 1920, p.10
'Art of J.C. Waite', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 7 September 1921, p.7
Exhibited:
Centennial International Exhibition, Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 1 August 1888 - 31 January 1889, no.132
J.C. Waite, R.B.A., Guild Hall, Melbourne, 11 April - 2 May 1908, no.2 (as View of Melbourne (Before the Boom)
J.C. Waite, Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 31 July 1914
Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 28 February 1920, no.1 (as Yarra, Melbourne)
Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Anthony Hordern & Sons, Sydney, 17 September 1921

Fish Janetview full entry
Reference: see see Menzies auction, September 26, 2019, Lot 87
JANET FISH
Beer Glasses 1977

pastel on paper
71.5 x 51.0 cm

signed and dated lower right: Janet Fish/ 77
Provenance:
Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, 1977 (label attached verso)
Private collection, Melbourne
Menzies, Sydney, 16-17 June 2004, lot 240
Private collection, Melbourne
Exhibited:
Janet Fish: Twenty Recent Pastels, Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, 14 June - 6 July 1977, cat.6
Gaze Harold (1884 - 1963view full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019:
The Mite Merry Series [Complete] : The SImple Jaggajay; The Chewg-um-blewg-um; The Billabonga Bird.
[’A fine complete set of Harold Gaze’s most famous and enchanting works, the complete Mite Merry series.
The Billabonga Bird. Melbourne : Whitcombe & Tombs, 1919. Quarto, illustrated card wrappers, string-bound (now perished), 30pp (mildly foxed), 3 tipped-in plates (2 colour, one monochrome), black and white line drawings.The adventures of an imaginary bird, a bush fairy and their bush-elf friends and other creatures, in rhyming verse. Muir 2698
The Chewg-um-blewg-um. Melbourne : Whitcombe & Tombs, 1919. 4to, illustrated card wrappers (a little edge-wear), string-bound (now perished), 30pp, 3 tipped-in colour plates, black and white line drawings. The adventures of a gum-leaf chewing koala, a gum-nut girl and a billabong bird, in rhyming verse. Muir 2699
The simple Jaggajay.  Melbourne : Whitcombe & Tombs, 1919. Quarto, illustrated card wrappers, ribbon-bound, 30pp (mildly foxed), 3 tipped-in plates (2 colour, one monochrome), black and white line drawings. The adventures of an imaginary bird, a gum-nut girl and their bush creature friends, in rhyming verse. Muir 2700
A very good set of rare and fragile publications. The three elements of the Mite Merry series are Gaze’s most inventive, surreal and creative books, described by historian Juliet O’Conor as ‘Anthropomorphism with an extreme fantasy make over’ (Bottersnikes and other lost things : A celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s Books, Melbourne 2009, p. 196, illustrated).
Harold Gaze was born in New Zealand and studied at art school in London during the First World War, after which he moved to Melbourne where he wrote and illustrated a number of books for children. He later returned to London and settled in Pasadena, California in 1927 where he resided until his death, working with Disney and continuing to publish. Many of the details of Gaze’s life have proven elusive to researchers but his unique and creative children’s stories and imagery remain delightful and sought after today.
Read’]
Ref: 1000
Browning Liliview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019: Portfolio of original watercolour and graphite designs made by a student at Swinburne Technical College (Senior School for Girls), Melbourne, 1916-18. ‘Unique hand-made artist’s portfolio, 410 x 310 mm, embroidered linen over boards, inner front board with stitched-on printed label advertising the Swinburne Senior Technical School for Girls’ Bazaar (16 September 1916), containing [54] loose sheets of artist’s paper (uniform 380 x 280 mm format) with student excercises in design and geometry, approximately one-third being in watercolour, the remainder in graphite, most sheets with work recto and verso; the designs – a number of which are competent expressions of a distinctively Australian art nouveau style (think Mucha with gumnuts) – are invariably signed ‘L. Browning’ (variously of Form ‘A’, ‘B’ or ‘C’), the last signed in full ‘Lily Browning’; most bear a date with day, month and year (either 1917 or 1918); occasional mild foxing, but essentially very well preserved throughout.
A precious archive documenting the work of a young female design student who was part of the first cohort to pass through Australia’s first technical school for girls. Established in 1916 by Melbourne’s Swinburne Technical College, the Girl’s Senior Technical School was originally located in a house on the corner of Burwood Road and John Street, Hawthorn.

Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: McCRAE, Hugh (1876-1958); LINDSAY, Norman (1879-1969)
Idyllia.
From Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019:
‘There is no mystery as to why Hugh McCrae would have chosen his poem Colombine to inscribe in his own copy of his second collaboration with Norman Lindsay. Bloomfield described Colombine as ‘a small lyrical masterpiece’ and it is widely regarded as the finest of McCrae’s works. This was the poem which, in a very real sense, had helped rescue the poet from poverty two years earlier and which would take on an almost talismanic significance for him. During a chance encounter in George Street with his friend Norman Lindsay, when McCrae had shown the artist his freshly-penned manuscript of Colombine, the poem had so impressed Lindsay that he promptly arranged for it to be published by Angus & Robertson; furthermore, in a gesture of great generosity toward his impoverished yet supremely gifted friend, Lindsay ensured that McCrae received the net profit from the sales of a de luxe edition of 20 copies that contained a fine, large Lindsay etching. The success of Colombine, the author’s second volume of poetry, cemented McCrae’s opinion of Lindsay as ‘the most generous man I have met in my life’ (Bloomfield, p. 56).
Published two years after Colombine, and containing five original etchings by Norman Lindsay, ‘Idyllia is a particularly fine example of small press publishing. One of the most dignified editions de luxe ever published in Australia….’ (Bloomfield, p. 59).’
Publishing details: [Sydney] : N.L. Press, [1922]. Large quarto (418 x 355 mm), bound in white calf over white papered boards with Norman Lindsay decoration in gold and red (a few light marks), 35 pp, with Lindsay decorations in black highlighted with gilt, further illustrated with five large original Norman Lindsay etchings with titled tissue guards tipped-in, each signed and numbered by the artist; the original etchings are ‘What the Deer Said’, ‘Robin Hood’, ‘Pantera’, ‘The Yellow Lady’ and ‘The Talking Breasts’. Limited to 133 copies of which 100 were for sale to the public, signed by Hugh McCrae (this copy is number 40); opposite the title page McCrae has inscribed the full text of his most famous poem, Colombine, with his signature at the foot; a superb and unique copy.
Ref: 1000
McCrae Hugh (1876-1958)view full entry
Reference: see McCRAE, Hugh (1876-1958); LINDSAY, Norman (1879-1969)
Idyllia.
From Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019:
‘There is no mystery as to why Hugh McCrae would have chosen his poem Colombine to inscribe in his own copy of his second collaboration with Norman Lindsay. Bloomfield described Colombine as ‘a small lyrical masterpiece’ and it is widely regarded as the finest of McCrae’s works. This was the poem which, in a very real sense, had helped rescue the poet from poverty two years earlier and which would take on an almost talismanic significance for him. During a chance encounter in George Street with his friend Norman Lindsay, when McCrae had shown the artist his freshly-penned manuscript of Colombine, the poem had so impressed Lindsay that he promptly arranged for it to be published by Angus & Robertson; furthermore, in a gesture of great generosity toward his impoverished yet supremely gifted friend, Lindsay ensured that McCrae received the net profit from the sales of a de luxe edition of 20 copies that contained a fine, large Lindsay etching. The success of Colombine, the author’s second volume of poetry, cemented McCrae’s opinion of Lindsay as ‘the most generous man I have met in my life’ (Bloomfield, p. 56).
Published two years after Colombine, and containing five original etchings by Norman Lindsay, ‘Idyllia is a particularly fine example of small press publishing. One of the most dignified editions de luxe ever published in Australia….’ (Bloomfield, p. 59).’
Publishing details: [Sydney] : N.L. Press, [1922]. Large quarto (418 x 355 mm), bound in white calf over white papered boards with Norman Lindsay decoration in gold and red (a few light marks), 35 pp, with Lindsay decorations in black highlighted with gilt, further illustrated with five large original Norman Lindsay etchings with titled tissue guards tipped-in, each signed and numbered by the artist; the original etchings are ‘What the Deer Said’, ‘Robin Hood’, ‘Pantera’, ‘The Yellow Lady’ and ‘The Talking Breasts’. Limited to 133 copies of which 100 were for sale to the public, signed by Hugh McCrae (this copy is number 40); opposite the title page McCrae has inscribed the full text of his most famous poem, Colombine, with his signature at the foot; a superb and unique copy.
Sturgess Reginald Ward (1892-1932)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019:‘Clung to his unstable refuge and waited upon fate’. Page 35. [’Illustration inspired by the novel the The Haunters of the silences by Canadian writer Charles G.D. Roberts. Watercolour on paper, 155 x 115 mm (sheet), signed and dated ‘A.W. Sturgess 1913’, artist’s caption in lower margin of sheet; in very good condition; framed (verso with annotations by Sturgess’ daughter, Beth Sinclair).
Melbourne artist R.W. Sturgess studied drawing and painting at the National Gallery school, where he completed his studies in 1912. His style was strongly influenced by the Art Nouveau movement, but initially his creative output was limited to the commercial sphere, in particular painted lampshade decoration. His first solo exhibition, held at the Athenaeum in 1922, was well received and followed by further exhibitions in Victoria and interstate throughout the 1920s.
Two major surveys of Sturgess’ work have been published: R.W. Sturgess : Water-colourist 1892-1932, by Peter Perry and Beth Sinclair (Castlemaine Art Gallery, 1986); and The life and work of R.W. Sturgess by R.H. Croll (Melbourne : The Fine Arts Society, 1938). Croll noted: ‘His untimely death was a loss to us all. His monument to posterity remains in the pictures he produced, which as time goes on will steadily be sought for and increase in interest and value’ (p.11).
According to his daughter and biographer, Beth Sinclair, who annotated the back of the frame, the Ballarat Art Gallery holds a further six of Sturgess’ illustrations for The Haunters of the silences.
Provenance: Estate of the artist’s daughter, Beth Sinclair.’]
photographyview full entry
Reference: see BOSTOCK, Cecil W. CAMERAGRAPHS OF THE YEAR 1924. A Souvenir of the First Exhibition of the Australian Salon of Photography. Quarto, pp. 48 (chiefly photographic plates) + tipped-in frontispiece, original cloth. The Sydney Camera Circle was behind the formation of the annual Australian Photography Salon in 1924 and 1926. Bostock, a leading figure in photography circles, designed the catalogues for both exhibitions, both of which also included lengthy critical reviews by Harold Cazneaux. Only the 1924 and 1926 salons were afforded substantial catalogues. + BOSTOCK, Cecil W. CAMERAGRAPHS 1926. Selections from the Second Exhibition of the Australian Salon of Photography. Quarto, tipped-in frontispiece and 48 pages of photographic plates, original cloth. Sydney, Harringtons, n.d. but 1926. Extremely scarce: one of the rare copies in original cloth , most were issued in wrappers. [Information from Australian Book Auctions catalogue, 23 May, 2016, lot 226.]
Publishing details: Sydney, Harringtons, n.d. but 1924. Edition limited to 1000 copies.
Tipping Richardview full entry
Reference: Six by six by six - Richard Tipping, Dikko Faust, Esther K. Smith. “Richard Tipping, wordworks ; Dikko Faust, hand typography ; Esther K. Smith, art direction. 6 by 6 inch edition of 6 x 6 x 6 = 216, on all rag museum board” -Colophon. New York publication from the Sydney based concrete poet.


Publishing details: New York City : Purgatory Pie Press, 1999. Small quarto, embossed wrappers in paper slipcase, letterpress poetry, accordian format. Signed by the artists.
Ref: 1000
textilesview full entry
Reference: see Raiki Wara: Long Cloth from Aboriginal Australia and the Torres Strait
Ryan, Judith and Robyn Healy. Survey of Aboriginal batik design - a technique introduced to the region in the 1970s. Lots of illustrations of innovative designs. Catalogue from the exhibition of Sept. to Oct. 1998 in 5 locations.

Publishing details: Published by National Gallery of Victoria, Victoria, Australia (1998), pb, Black ill. wraps. 132 pp. 11 color plates.
clothview full entry
Reference: see Raiki Wara: Long Cloth from Aboriginal Australia and the Torres Strait
Ryan, Judith and Robyn Healy. Survey of Aboriginal batik design - a technique introduced to the region in the 1970s. Lots of illustrations of innovative designs. Catalogue from the exhibition of Sept. to Oct. 1998 in 5 locations.

Publishing details: Published by National Gallery of Victoria, Victoria, Australia (1998), pb, Black ill. wraps. 132 pp. 11 color plates.
Rubin Victorview full entry
Reference: Street faces. Drawings by Victor Rubin 1980
Publishing details: [Sydney : the artist, 1980]. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, 50 unnumbered leaves of drawings.
Ref: 1009
Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Anthony Lister. Supermarket, 2006. Early catalogue by the Brisbane born artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Metro 5 Gallery, 2006. Oblong octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. [12], illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Makin Jeffrey 13 exhibition cataloguesview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine books, September 2019:
Jeff Makin : a collection of exhibition catalogues:

1 Landscapes and gardens by Jeffrey Makin. Sydney : Macquarie Galleries, 1975. Folding card, pp. 4, catalogue. Includes postcard invitation signed and inscribed by the artist.
2 Jeff Makin. S.l. : S.n, circa 1980. Folding biographical brochure, illustrated.
3 Jeffrey Makin. Landscapes 1980 – 82. Tolarno Galleries, 1982. Invitation card.
4 Jeffrey Makin. Realities Gallery, 1984. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
5 Jeffrey Makin. Realities Gallery, 1986. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
6 Jeff Makin. BMG Art, 1996. Exhibition invite card
7 Jeffrey Makin. BMG Art, 1999. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
8 Jeffrey Makin. Australia Felix : The heroic landscape. Lauraine Diggins, 2001. Folding card, pp. 6, illustrated
9 Earth. Fire. Water. Elements of the landscape. Metro 5 Gallery, 2001. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
10 Jeffrey Makin. Australia Felix. Metro 5 Gallery, 2002. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
11 Jeffrey Makin. Landmarks. James Makin Gallery, 2008. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.
12 Jeffrey Makin. Genii Loci. Stonnington Stables, 2002. Invite card
13 Jeffrey Makin. A graphic survey. Port Jackson Press, 2007. Folding exhibition brochure, illustrated.



Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Anthony Lister. This won’t change anything
Publishing details: Melbourne : Metro 5 Gallery, 2008. Poster, double sided, folding to oblong octavo, illustrated. Early catalogue by the Brisbane born artist.


Ref: 1000
Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Anthony Lister. Super is as super does

Publishing details: Melbourne : Metro 5 Gallery, 2007. Oblong octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. [12], illustrated. Early catalogue by the Brisbane born artist.

Ref: 1000
Cazneaux Haroldview full entry
Reference: The Australian Native Bear Book. Photographs by Cazneaux.

Publishing details: Sydney: Sydney Ure Smith, 1930. Quarto, paper wrappers with Margaret Preston woodcut,  24pp. illustrated with Cazneaux photographs.
Ref: 1000
Judd Craigview full entry
Reference: Still life Stuart Black, by Craig Judd.
Monograph on the painter Stuart Black (1937 – 2007), prominent member of the gay community and pioneer of Melbourne’s leather scene.
Publishing details: Melbourne] : Trustees of the Estate of Stuart Alan Black, 2012. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 84, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Swallow Rickyview full entry
Reference: Ricky Swallow. Bronzes.
[’Ricky Swallow is known for intricately and attentively crafted sculptural works, often combining contemporary imagery with art historical references, and the traditional notion of nature morte.’]
Publishing details: London : Stuart Shave / Modern Art, [2013]. Quarto, lettered papered boards, pp. 110, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Hjorth Noela view full entry
Reference: John Olsen 81-82 and Noela Hjorth.
Publishing details: Perth : Festival of Perth, 1982. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, 10pp, numerous full page coloured plates throughout.
Ref: 1000
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen 81-82 and Noela Hjorth.
Publishing details: Perth : Festival of Perth, 1982. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, 10pp, numerous full page coloured plates throughout.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: John Perceval. Early drawings 1944 – 1962
Publishing details: Melbourne : Australian Galleries, 1987. Illustrated poster with numerous reproductions, folded as issued.
Ref: 1000
Boyd Robinview full entry
Reference: Living in Australia / Robin Boyd ; Mark Strizic, photography. [’Originally published in 1970 Living in Australia provided Boyd with an opportunity to describe his own approach to design. This new edition, co-published with the Robin Boyd Foundation, includes new colour photographs by John Gollings and essays by renowned architects Kerstin Thompson and Rachel Neeson reflecting upon the importance of Boyd's work.
Notes Originally published: Sydney : Pergamon Press, 1970.
Includes index.
All the buildings illustrated in this book are the author's own work.
"Understanding design : Robin Boyd Foundation"’]
Publishing details: Thames and Hudson Australia, 2013, 179 pages : illustrations, plans, photographs
Ref: 1000
Finucane Moiraview full entry
Reference: See Lowensteins Artist profile: Moira Finucane
Written by: 
Fiona Gruber
Moira Finucane has been described as a force of nature; but the performer and producer’s identity as Queen of edgy, sometimes monstrous genre and gender-twisting cabaret is a carefully crafted one, embellished over a career spanning three decades.
With her stern Gothic looks and elaborate, Goddess meets fantasy-heroine costumes, the co-creator and star of variety shows such as The Burlesque Hour is a power-station of ideas and – I’m affected by her hyperbole – an avalanche of elaborately crafted statements about her work and its place in the world.
“I’m interested in creating cultural heat, legendary work that celebrates and provokes and explores power, desire and extinction, “ she explains, about her latest show, The Rapture Chapter II: Art vs Extinction.
She’s parked in a car outside of Alice Springs when we talk, on the final leg of a development tour for the show. This has taken her to Berlin and Prague alongside the Tiwi Islands, the APY Lands, and Antarctica.
The show opens in Melbourne in early September and both it and its predecessor, The Rapture (2017) have an end-days, apocalyptic feel, in an evening that, to quote Finucane’s media release, combines “a transcendent, synaesthetic emporium of gothic-erotic dreams, rock’n’roll angels, soul searing music, porcelain icicles, couture, sculpture, skin shedding tales and total art gesamtkunstwerk.”
Does that really explain what you’ll be seeing? No, but descriptions of Finucane’s shows, often devised with her long term partner Jackie Smith, have always been hard. Her co-stars come from diverse cultures and art forms as well as ranging widely in age; Shirley Cattunar, a performer and dancer in several shows, is 82.
The process of making this show has included working with the Mudburra people of Marlinja, NT and producing an album for the singer Ray Dimakarri Dixon, who is now also part of The Rapture’s G force.
The show’s environmental themes are not a Johnny-come-lately obsession for Finucane; in a previous incarnation, and for many years, the Western Australian science graduate found herself in Melbourne as National Campaign Co-ordinator for the Wilderness Society. She lobbied in Canberra, and proselytised to the faithful from Kakadu to Tasmania.
But alongside her day job, Finucane was drawn to perform as part of a burgeoning underground cabaret scene. This flowered into an increasingly overground political and feminist performance scene in the late ‘90s.
The Burlesque Hour, later renamed Glory Box is her best-known show and has played in cities and festivals worldwide to an estimated audience of 300,000.
It began life in 2004 at inner-city venue fortyfivedownstairs and this is where The Rapture series is also being staged. Many of her other shows have also been seen here.
Finucane’s had residencies in Brazil, Norway and France and when I ask her where she might live if not in Melbourne, she names Paris and the small Cornish town of Fowey as favourite spots. But Australia is where she belongs, she emphasises;
“I’m passionately in love with the country I was born in,” she says, “this place is stunning and I feel a responsibility to do the best for it.”

Bartlett Henry Francis b1916view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons Auction, September 8, 2019, for two works including 'City from Wilson's Lookout', Oil on Canvas 75x65cm
Provenance: The Verlie Just Collection.
Patterson Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Davidsons Auction September 8, 2019, lot 1278 PATTERSON, George
'Combined Operations Pilotage Party Leaving MTB
to Make Beach Reconnaissance, Anzio 1944.'
Unsigned (family provenance).
W/Clr
22x28cm
White Cyril Leyshon (1891-1955) view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons Auction Sale 137 Lot 253
WHITE, Cyril Leyshon (1891-1955)
Construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
Dated indistinctly.
W/Clr
24x33cm
Patterson Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Lawsons online auction Fine Art - including works from the family of The Late Sydney Ure Smith - Sale 8821. 12 September 2019,Lot 506
George Patterson
The Murray River, Khancoban NSW
oil on canvas board
34 x 44cm
signed and dated lower right. Proveanance: from the family of The Late Sydney Ure Smith
Estimate $250-350
Lloyd Normanview full entry
Reference: see GARDINER HOULGATE auction, UK, 26 Sep 2019 , lot 781: Norman Lloyd (19th/20th century) - Mediterranean hillside town with sunlit buildings and mountains beyond, signed, 18" x 22"
-
*The work is possibly by the Australian landscape painter Norman Lloyd who was born on the 16th October 1895 and died on March 5th 1983, he was born near Newcastle, New South Wales where he attended primary school and left school in 1911 and started to work and study painting with Julian Ashton and James R. Jackson in Sydney. In the 1930s, Lloyd migrated to London with his wife Edith setting up a boarding house in upmarket St John's Wood and establishing himself quickly in the new society, his house became a meeting point and home for many Australian ex-pats, amongst them the painters Will Ashton, Alison Rehfisch and George Duncan. The Lloyds hosted pianist Nancy Weir and war correspondent Harold Fyffe was a close friend, who introduced Lloyd to H G Wells and George Bernard Shaw
Leonard Virginiaview full entry
Reference: Virginia Leonard - Goria. Catalogue includes biographical information.
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2019, 16pp. Pricelist inserted.
Ref: 1000
Ross Sallyview full entry
Reference: Sally Ross New Paintings. Catalogue includes biographical information.
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2019, 16pp. Pricelist inserted.
Ref: 1000
Burn Henryview full entry
Reference: see Menzies Art Brands auction, 26 September, 2019, lot 26: HENRY BURN
Sandridge From The Lagoon c1870

oil on academy board
38.5 x 63.5 cm


Provenance:
Private collection, Melbourne
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 1993 (as View over Albert Park Lake to Hobson's Bay c1860, label attached verso, stock no.930513)
Private collection, Sydney
Company collection, Sydney
Related work:
Sandridge from the Lagoon c1870, oil on millboard, 30.0 x 42.0 cm, State Library of Victoria collection, Melbourne, gift of Miss E. Blandell, 1930
Sandridge from the Point Ormond Lagoon 1870, oil on board, 30.0 x 47.0 cm, Geelong Art Gallery collection, Victoria
Sandridge from the Point Ormond Lagoon 1869, watercolour on paper, 26.0 x 44.0 cm, private collection; sold Deutscher + Hackett, Melbourne, 24 April 2013, lot 91, $22,200 (including buyer's premium)
Exhibited:
The Changing Face of Melbourne 1841-1993, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 4 October - 6 November 1993, cat.3 (illus. exhibition catalogue, p.5)
‘Mid-nineteenth century Australian art is regaled by the names of artists who came for the gold but ended up putting far more back into their adopted country than what they took out. Eugene von Guérard (1811-1901) and S. T. Gill (1818-1890) are two of the best-known artists to have ventured to Australia during the 1850s gold rush. To that esteemed company we can add talented painters, illustrators and lithographers including Henry Gritten (1818-1873), Edwin Roper Loftus Stocqueler (1829-1895) and Henry Burn (1807-1884).
Henry Burn was born in England and emigrated to Australia in October 1852. He had already made a name for himself as an artist in his native Birmingham, exhibiting at the Royal Academy and the Birmingham Society of Artists in the 1930s. Between 1840 and 1852, Burn travelled extensively around England producing topographical views of towns ‘as far north as Yorkshire, [and] as far south as Dorset’.1
Victoria, in the second half of the nineteenth century, was a place of tremendous possibility and growth. Melbourne and other regional centres developed at an unprecedented rate, with the Victorian capital eventually becoming one of the largest and richest cities in the world. Arriving aboard the barque Baltimore in January 1853, Burn quickly set about tapping into this new-found optimism. The Argus refers to a watercolour of a view of Melbourne that Burn completed in December 1853.2 He hoped to lithograph and sell it through public subscription.
Although not successful on that occasion, undeterred, Burn continued to explore and capture Melbourne and its environs through a series of evocative paintings, watercolours and prints. Many of these were painted or produced not far from where he lived in inner-city Collingwood. In 1869, six of Burn’s watercolours were included in a loan exhibition at the Melbourne Public Library while in the following year, he was invited to exhibit in the inaugural exhibition of the Victorian Academy of Art. This exhibition was opened with much fanfare by Melbourne’s developing cultural elite in 1870 and included a work by Burn simply entitled Sandridge.
Sandridge from the Lagoon c1870 was painted from a vantage point in St Kilda, possibly near the Point Ormond Lagoon.3 The picture looks north across Port Phillip Bay toward the port and industrial township of Sandridge (later Port Melbourne). The factory and smoking chimney stacks of the Victorian Sugar Company, Sandridge, are clearly visible in the distance as well as the masts of the docked ships in Hobson’s Bay and the lower Yarra.
Burn’s picture presents a tranquil, almost bucolic, setting of cows grazing and drinking toward the end of the day. It exemplifies his ability to depict his chosen subjects with a high degree of accuracy and finesse as well as a penchant to embellish those attributes with subtle renderings of passing clouds, glowing light and gentle reflections and shadows.
Sandridge and the fringes of Port Phillip Bay from St Kilda to Brighton were popular painting spots for artists. There are four known works with a similar view that Burn painted in the space of two years. The earliest of the four works are a watercolour titled Sandridge from the Point Ormond Lagoon, dated 1869, and a small oil with the same title, dated 1870 from the Geelong Gallery collection. Both pictures are delightfully light and airy evocations, attributes that are continued in Sandridge from the Lagoon.
Collectively these paintings reveal Henry Burn’s ability to faithfully reproduce prominent landmarks and buildings and a talent for capturing local colour, light and atmosphere. The subject and viewpoint also show how Burn led the way in highlighting Melbourne at the cusp of its transition from a small colonial settlement to a modern metropolis.
 
Footnotes
1. Reynolds, P., ‘A note on Henry Burn, 1807-1884’, The La Trobe Journal, No.11, April 1973, p.49
2. Argus, 19 December 1853
3. There is some conjecture regarding the precise spot the work was painted from. Contemporary maps such as one by Henry L. Cox, printed in 1866, show that there were a plethora of lagoons and low-lying areas situated from Elwood as far up as present-day St Kilda West.
 
Rodney James BA (Hons); MA’
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Menzies Art Brands auction, 26 September, 2019, lot LOT 26
CHARLES CONDER
The Spanish Shawl (Portrait Of Annie Cecil Lawson) c1905

oil on board
68.0 x 53.5 cm


Labels:
label attached verso with artist's name and title
James Bourlet & Sons, London, framer's label verso
Arnold Wiggins & Sons Limited, London, framer's label verso
Provenance:
Mrs Stella Maris Conder, United Kingdom
Thence by descent, Mrs Annie Cecil Lawson, United Kingdom
Thence by descent, Mrs Helen Pawson, United Kingdom
J.S. Maas & Co., London, 1965
Nevill Keating Pictures, London
Private collection
Private collection, Sydney
Reference:
Rothenstein, J., The Life and Death of Conder, J.W. Dent & Sons, London, 1938, p.283
Galbally, A., Charles Conder: The Last Bohemian, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 2002, p.267
Exhibited:
Charles Conder, City Art Gallery, Leeds, United Kingdom, 1933, cat.37
‘This picture is less a portrait of his sister-in-law and hostess than about the ‘treasure’ which caught his eye and stirred his imagination during a recent visit to Spain. (Conder had an interest in Spain before this time. In Scaramouche, one of the sketched figures is a lady with a mantilla). The colours, the pattern and the gradations of colour stimulated his imagination. The shawl dominates this portrait of his sister-in-law, Mrs Lawson. The line of the shawl falls in a swathe across the subject’s body. There is a careful balance of light from the window behind and the light within the room. The latter is sufficient to show the jewel-like colours of the shawl.
There is a disproportionately high intaglioed seat which overlooks Coogee Bay. On closer inspection, it is apparent that this is not placed as an ergonomic or exercise challenge but to remind us of the location where memorable pictures were painted by Charles Conder (1868-1909), Tom Roberts (1956-1931) and Arthur Streeton (1867-1943), who later formed the Heidelberg School.
The Art Gallery of South Australia have an outstanding painting by Conder, Holiday at Mentone, which imaginatively and wittily explores form, colour, and light.
In 1890, Conder’s wish to study in Paris was fulfilled by his benevolent uncle.1 Change and transformation was afoot. There were technological, social and economic changes, not unlike today. Steam drove trains and ships. Communications were affected by printing and the telegraph. Business became global. From the 1870s, London was the centre of the money markets in the financial world. At the same time, the art market changed and became international.2 Commercial galleries started with branches in Paris, Berlin and New York. Many of the new Plutocrats and Randlords, who aspired to the English way of life, went to live in London and created a demand for of Old Master paintings. A few bought ‘modern’ painters.
The art world was in flux. Impressionists, Post-Impressionists and uncategorised others were exploring light, colour, shapes and form. Nineteenth century scientific knowledge about the physics of light allowed the artist to experiment with visual perception and note the discrepancy between this and the constraints of the palette.3 Narrative painting of the Victorian period was challenged.
By 1893, Conder changed from an emerging young painter to an artist with an established style which was recognised and praised by influential critics who included him in lists of leading ‘modern’ artists. He was described as an imaginative ‘modern’ British artist who was renowned as a colourist.
In a recent article Professor Petra ten-Doesschaute Chu selected a label for Conder’s work, ‘borrowing a term from Oscar Wilde, who defined aesthetic eclecticism as ‘the true harmony of all really beautiful things irrespective of age or place, of school or manner’…[it] allowed for the random ‘collage style’ juxtaposition of beautiful elements.’ 4
The transformation and reception of Conder’s work during the next seventeen years is best understood through the reports of his contemporaries who included: fellow artists and friends; critics who are also fellow artists; and just critics. Sir William Rothenstein (1872-1945) was a fellow student and artist in Paris. He was a lifelong friend who later became Director of the National Art School. With some vicissitudes, their friendship survived. William Rothenstein felt that nobody knew Conder as well as he. Sir John Rothenstein (1901-1920) (Keeper of the Tate Gallery, 1938-1964) recorded here his father’s view of Conder and his work when they first met:5
Rothenstein was struck rather by the personality of the large blond student than the quality of his work. His painting was then anaemic, self-consciously aesthetic, sugary, and sentimental. His drawing was even more feeble. Directly he came to Paris and his work began to develop rapidly…He and Rothenstein, with whom he lived for greater part of the year 1890…were among the few English art students who at this time associated intimately with their French confrères. One of those whom they saw most often during 1890 was Touluse Lautrec….In spite of his friendship with Lautrec and Bonnard, his admiration for Degas and Puvis de Chavannes, and intelligent interest in French contemporary painting, his own aesthetic outlook at first did not greatly change…when he first met Louis Anquetin all this was changed…[he] became the most potent influence in Conder’s life. [His work] now rapidly acquired the qualities which were to remain characteristic of it…his composition became steadily bolder and more intricate, his colour stronger and subtler….By 1893 the first phase of his painting was closed…
With this new imaginative phase [Commedia dell’Arte, Moliere and Balzac etc ] came much admiration…The Société Nationale des Beaux Artes elected him an associate member in 1893, and he exhibited there regularly.6
William Rothenstein drew attention to the significance of Conder’s oil paintings in Since Fifty Men and Memories, 1922-1938, ‘his later canvases show a bold conception and an energy to which his silk painting do not attain.  It was his early oil painting which attracted Lautrec and Anquetin rather than his slighter fans, the fans which brought popularity to Conder in England…’7
Sir John Rothenstein read many letters from Conder to his father which have not yet been published.
Rothenstein described Conder’s increased success in the first years of the twentieth century. He distilled the essence of Conder’s skills thus, ‘Never had his extraordinary capacity for organising the most complicated and subtle poses without reference to life itself shown itself so powerfully. I can think of no other English artist who could, without a single note, without preparation of any sort, carry out large and intricate designs as Conder did. He was never a good draftsman, his sense of construction was vague and faulty, yet a terrific feeling for design and atmosphere enabled him to accomplish what he did’.8
William Rothenstein drew attention to his understanding of Conder’s talent in Men and Memories 1900-1902 and particularly to Conder’s oil paintings:
‘There were qualities of Conder’s mind and art which no one, I thought, understood as I did…
In some ways Conder was more adventurous than other painters; he was instinct with inventive powers and could put down a complicated composition with extraordinary ability, giving life and beauty to his figures. His sense of physical beauty of women, of the grace of their movements, of feminine radiance, was unique - in his period at least…His art was based partly on his sense of style, of gesture, of artificial comedy, in a word the comedy of Davenant, of Congreve, and of Watteau and Fragonard; and in large measure too, on his subtle observation of actual life. Each side of his nature helped the other. He had a great feeling for form…He is one of the rare lyrical painters.’ 9
Dugald Stuart MacColl (1859-1948), the most influential art critic of the period, wrote for the Spectator (1890-1896) and the Saturday Review (1896-1906) and other publications before his appointment as Keeper of the Tate Gallery (1906-1910) and later the Wallace Collection (1911-1924).10
In the Spectator 24 June 1893, MacColl recommended a visit to the Goupil Gallery to see ‘several pictures by Mr Charles Conder, whose work at the Champs de Mars has been so remarkable these last two years for the beauty of its colour and poetry of its feeling’.
Later the same year, on 23 December in the Spectator, MacColl reviewed the Winter Exhibitions. At the New English Art Club he referred to Conder; ‘Mr Conder’s work is artistic in the sense that it is composed and subdued to accord with a scheme and sentiment.  There are no loose ends, no gossip about things; it is an attempt upon the music of nature.’
The New England Art Club is described here in the Spectator, April 27, 1895, p.579: ‘Happily, all the old fountains of art are capable of breaking out afresh, and the New English Art Club includes, in Mr Charles Conder, a poet of rare quality’.
MacColl moved to the Saturday Review and on 10 June 1899, referred to panels exhibited in London which were commissioned by Mr Siegfried Bing for his Paris Art Nouveau exhibition, when he reviewed Conder’s work, ‘here is the man who can put three colours together so that they are Spring to the eyes, and set his marionettes in strange countries that are like a regret, a desire, the scent of a flower, the pain of a song.’
MacColl reviewed an exhibition in 1910, Twenty Years of British Art at the Whitechapel Gallery. He wrote about his concern that modern English artists were not represented in official collections. However, there were two collections which did have representative modern works, one in Dublin and the other in Johannesburg which included ‘… Courbet, Puvis de Chavannes, Manet, Jongkind, Monet, the Belgian Stevens, Monticelli…and alongside of them the Englishmen who are the right company for such masters. Conder, one of the real talents of our period…; Steer, the man who stands in our time for the art of Turner and Constable…; John, and a number of younger men,…have their rightful place…The English School has been the name for sporadic genius in the past, it is more descriptive now as a title than ever before’. 11
Soon after Conder’s death in 1910, Frank Gibson wrote Charles Conder: his Life and Work. There was an unsigned review (probably MacColl) in the Spectator from December 13, 1913, p.23. The reviewer described here Conder’s pictures more broadly:
This volume forms a worthy tribute to an exceptional talent. Conder took little heed of the actual world, but created one of his own, which he delighted to paint. This world was in truth the world of the stage, not a scene from the audience, but a country constructed out of theatrical properties. But what made it new and original was that it was always perfect in artistic taste. With an unerring instinct Conder saw that to people this land with actual human beings would be absurd. He therefore constructed people on the same principle as the pasteboard trees and buildings which have no substance, and out of these strange materials he evolved fantasies of exquisite grace. But the crowning gift of this artist was his sense of colour; in this he was never at fault, and with unerring instinct he could always command effects that as beautiful as they were subtle…It is early to talk of immortality, but if Conder lives it will be in virtue of his gifts as a colourist.12
T. Martin Wood, in The Studio, reviewed a commission from an important patron, Sir Edmund Davis.
The selection of no other artist to fill these panels could have been so successful as that of Mr Conder…by his panels the eye is engaged, the intelligence aroused, but only to a point; a story is told, a drama is enacted in them which is never finished. There is a purpose about the actions of the figure which evades us, and this elusiveness gives us rest….we are not called upon to look into our memory for history, we are not put out of court in the matter of subject by ignorance of their legend, we are not teased with symbolism….his methods are charmingly indefinite in their refinements of escaping tone…in their delicate colour. Beauty with him in those panels is light and decadent; they are full of fancy, crowded with images, pictures and memories of faded things. Mr Conder gives to us an escape into the refinement of pleasure of an hour departed. This is the sentiment of his designs; it is part of the delicate manner of his expression, and it lies behind the remarkable colour that early brought him to fame.13’

Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Menzies Art Brands auction, 26 September, 2019, lot LOT 27:
CHARLES CONDER
The Verandah: Baroness A. De Meyer And Friends

oil on canvas
71.5 x 91.5 cm

signed lower left: CONDER
Labels:
James Bourlet & Sons, London, framer's label verso
Charles Robertson & Co, London, colourman label verso
Provenance:
Mrs Stella Maris Conder, United Kingdom
Thence by descent, Mrs Annie Cecil Lawson, United Kingdom
Thence by descent, Mrs Helen Pawson, United Kingdom
J.S. Maas & Co., London, 1965
Nevill Keating Pictures, London
Private collection
Private collection, Sydney
Related work:
Portrait of Olga de Meyer (The Green Dress) c1906, oil, dimensions and whereabouts unknown; exhibited at International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Engravers, London, 1906
Baroness Olga de Meyer, oil on board, 10.5 x 8.0 cm (irreg.), private collection; sold Christie's, Melbourne, 1 August 1995, lot 281
Reference:
Galbally, A. & Pearce, B., Charles Conder, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2003, p.185 (reference to portraits of Olga de Meyer)
‘Conder captures a moment in time by the coast, perhaps Dieppe, with the subtle transition of colour from the distant sky and sea to the elaborate elegant costumes worn by the leisured Edwardian women. All faces are the same. Likenesses would detract from the moment, the freshness of the sea air, the newcomer in transition from a promenade below, about to join the group. All is dream-like and beautiful to behold. It is not difficult to be refreshed by this picture each time it is seen.
The Baroness de Meyer was a friend of Conder. They met in Dieppe when Jacques Émile Blanche invited him to join his family at their holiday retreat. Their neighbour was the Duchess of Caracciolo and her daughter, Olga, after whom the house was named- the Villa Olga. Later, Olga became the Baroness de Meyer when her godfather, King Edward VII, arranged an introduction and a new life for her in London. Her salons were both famous and infamous. Conder and Blanche were intermittent attendees.
-----
There is a disproportionately high intaglioed seat which overlooks Coogee Bay. On closer inspection, it is apparent that this is not placed as an ergonomic or exercise challenge but to remind us of the location where memorable pictures were painted by Charles Conder (1868-1909), Tom Roberts (1956-1931) and Arthur Streeton (1867-1943), who later formed the Heidelberg School.
The Art Gallery of South Australia have an outstanding painting by Conder, Holiday at Mentone, which imaginatively and wittily explores form, colour, and light.
In 1890, Conder’s wish to study in Paris was fulfilled by his benevolent uncle.1 Change and transformation was afoot. There were technological, social and economic changes, not unlike today. Steam drove trains and ships. Communications were affected by printing and the telegraph. Business became global. From the 1870s, London was the centre of the money markets in the financial world. At the same time, the art market changed and became international.2 Commercial galleries started with branches in Paris, Berlin and New York. Many of the new Plutocrats and Randlords, who aspired to the English way of life, went to live in London and created a demand for of Old Master paintings. A few bought ‘modern’ painters.
The art world was in flux. Impressionists, Post-Impressionists and uncategorised others were exploring light, colour, shapes and form. Nineteenth century scientific knowledge about the physics of light allowed the artist to experiment with visual perception and note the discrepancy between this and the constraints of the palette.3 Narrative painting of the Victorian period was challenged.
By 1893, Conder changed from an emerging young painter to an artist with an established style which was recognised and praised by influential critics who included him in lists of leading ‘modern’ artists. He was described as an imaginative ‘modern’ British artist who was renowned as a colourist.
In a recent article Professor Petra ten-Doesschaute Chu selected a label for Conder’s work, ‘borrowing a term from Oscar Wilde, who defined aesthetic eclecticism as ‘the true harmony of all really beautiful things irrespective of age or place, of school or manner’…[it] allowed for the random ‘collage style’ juxtaposition of beautiful elements.’ 4
The transformation and reception of Conder’s work during the next seventeen years is best understood through the reports of his contemporaries who included: fellow artists and friends; critics who are also fellow artists; and just critics. Sir William Rothenstein (1872-1945) was a fellow student and artist in Paris. He was a lifelong friend who later became Director of the National Art School. With some vicissitudes, their friendship survived. William Rothenstein felt that nobody knew Conder as well as he. Sir John Rothenstein (1901-1920) (Keeper of the Tate Gallery, 1938-1964) recorded here his father’s view of Conder and his work when they first met:5
Rothenstein was struck rather by the personality of the large blond student than the quality of his work. His painting was then anaemic, self-consciously aesthetic, sugary, and sentimental. His drawing was even more feeble. Directly he came to Paris and his work began to develop rapidly…He and Rothenstein, with whom he lived for greater part of the year 1890…were among the few English art students who at this time associated intimately with their French confrères. One of those whom they saw most often during 1890 was Touluse Lautrec….In spite of his friendship with Lautrec and Bonnard, his admiration for Degas and Puvis de Chavannes, and intelligent interest in French contemporary painting, his own aesthetic outlook at first did not greatly change…when he first met Louis Anquetin all this was changed…[he] became the most potent influence in Conder’s life. [His work] now rapidly acquired the qualities which were to remain characteristic of it…his composition became steadily bolder and more intricate, his colour stronger and subtler….By 1893 the first phase of his painting was closed…
With this new imaginative phase [Commedia dell’Arte, Moliere and Balzac etc ] came much admiration…The Société Nationale des Beaux Artes elected him an associate member in 1893, and he exhibited there regularly.6
William Rothenstein drew attention to the significance of Conder’s oil paintings in Since Fifty Men and Memories, 1922-1938, ‘his later canvases show a bold conception and an energy to which his silk painting do not attain.  It was his early oil painting which attracted Lautrec and Anquetin rather than his slighter fans, the fans which brought popularity to Conder in England…’7
Sir John Rothenstein read many letters from Conder to his father which have not yet been published.
Rothenstein described Conder’s increased success in the first years of the twentieth century. He distilled the essence of Conder’s skills thus, ‘Never had his extraordinary capacity for organising the most complicated and subtle poses without reference to life itself shown itself so powerfully. I can think of no other English artist who could, without a single note, without preparation of any sort, carry out large and intricate designs as Conder did. He was never a good draftsman, his sense of construction was vague and faulty, yet a terrific feeling for design and atmosphere enabled him to accomplish what he did’.8
William Rothenstein drew attention to his understanding of Conder’s talent in Men and Memories 1900-1902 and particularly to Conder’s oil paintings:
‘There were qualities of Conder’s mind and art which no one, I thought, understood as I did…
In some ways Conder was more adventurous than other painters; he was instinct with inventive powers and could put down a complicated composition with extraordinary ability, giving life and beauty to his figures. His sense of physical beauty of women, of the grace of their movements, of feminine radiance, was unique - in his period at least…His art was based partly on his sense of style, of gesture, of artificial comedy, in a word the comedy of Davenant, of Congreve, and of Watteau and Fragonard; and in large measure too, on his subtle observation of actual life. Each side of his nature helped the other. He had a great feeling for form…He is one of the rare lyrical painters.’ 9
Dugald Stuart MacColl (1859-1948), the most influential art critic of the period, wrote for the Spectator (1890-1896) and the Saturday Review (1896-1906) and other publications before his appointment as Keeper of the Tate Gallery (1906-1910) and later the Wallace Collection (1911-1924).10
In the Spectator 24 June 1893, MacColl recommended a visit to the Goupil Gallery to see ‘several pictures by Mr Charles Conder, whose work at the Champs de Mars has been so remarkable these last two years for the beauty of its colour and poetry of its feeling’.
Later the same year, on 23 December in the Spectator, MacColl reviewed the Winter Exhibitions. At the New English Art Club he referred to Conder; ‘Mr Conder’s work is artistic in the sense that it is composed and subdued to accord with a scheme and sentiment.  There are no loose ends, no gossip about things; it is an attempt upon the music of nature.’
The New England Art Club is described here in the Spectator, April 27, 1895, p.579: ‘Happily, all the old fountains of art are capable of breaking out afresh, and the New English Art Club includes, in Mr Charles Conder, a poet of rare quality’.
MacColl moved to the Saturday Review and on 10 June 1899, referred to panels exhibited in London which were commissioned by Mr Siegfried Bing for his Paris Art Nouveau exhibition, when he reviewed Conder’s work, ‘here is the man who can put three colours together so that they are Spring to the eyes, and set his marionettes in strange countries that are like a regret, a desire, the scent of a flower, the pain of a song.’
MacColl reviewed an exhibition in 1910, Twenty Years of British Art at the Whitechapel Gallery. He wrote about his concern that modern English artists were not represented in official collections. However, there were two collections which did have representative modern works, one in Dublin and the other in Johannesburg which included ‘… Courbet, Puvis de Chavannes, Manet, Jongkind, Monet, the Belgian Stevens, Monticelli…and alongside of them the Englishmen who are the right company for such masters. Conder, one of the real talents of our period…; Steer, the man who stands in our time for the art of Turner and Constable…; John, and a number of younger men,…have their rightful place…The English School has been the name for sporadic genius in the past, it is more descriptive now as a title than ever before’. 11
Soon after Conder’s death in 1910, Frank Gibson wrote Charles Conder: his Life and Work. There was an unsigned review (probably MacColl) in the Spectator from December 13, 1913, p.23. The reviewer described here Conder’s pictures more broadly:
This volume forms a worthy tribute to an exceptional talent. Conder took little heed of the actual world, but created one of his own, which he delighted to paint. This world was in truth the world of the stage, not a scene from the audience, but a country constructed out of theatrical properties. But what made it new and original was that it was always perfect in artistic taste. With an unerring instinct Conder saw that to people this land with actual human beings would be absurd. He therefore constructed people on the same principle as the pasteboard trees and buildings which have no substance, and out of these strange materials he evolved fantasies of exquisite grace. But the crowning gift of this artist was his sense of colour; in this he was never at fault, and with unerring instinct he could always command effects that as beautiful as they were subtle…It is early to talk of immortality, but if Conder lives it will be in virtue of his gifts as a colourist.12
T. Martin Wood, in The Studio, reviewed a commission from an important patron, Sir Edmund Davis.
The selection of no other artist to fill these panels could have been so successful as that of Mr Conder…by his panels the eye is engaged, the intelligence aroused, but only to a point; a story is told, a drama is enacted in them which is never finished. There is a purpose about the actions of the figure which evades us, and this elusiveness gives us rest….we are not called upon to look into our memory for history, we are not put out of court in the matter of subject by ignorance of their legend, we are not teased with symbolism….his methods are charmingly indefinite in their refinements of escaping tone…in their delicate colour. Beauty with him in those panels is light and decadent; they are full of fancy, crowded with images, pictures and memories of faded things. Mr Conder gives to us an escape into the refinement of pleasure of an hour departed. This is the sentiment of his designs; it is part of the delicate manner of his expression, and it lies behind the remarkable colour that early brought him to fame.13’
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Menzies Art Brands auction, 26 September, 2019, lot LOT 28:
CHARLES CONDER
Scaramouche c1900

oil on canvas
176.5 x 110.5 cm


Provenance:
Mrs Stella Maris Conder, United Kingdom
Acquired from the above, Sir William Rothenstein, United Kingdom
Thence by descent, Mrs Holliday, United Kingdom
Mr Barry Humphries, United Kingdom
Private collection, Sydney
Related work:
The Spectre 1900, watercolour and gold on silk, 22.5 x 27.5 cm, Ashmolean Museum collection, United Kingdom, Madan Bequest, 1962; illus. in Galbally, A. & Pearce, B., Charles Conder, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2003, p.138
Le Retour de Pierrot (The Return of Pierrot) 1899, handpainted mahogany three-fold screen with silk panels painted in watercolour, 172.0 x 130.0 cm (overall), Queensland Art Gallery collection, Brisbane, purchased 1994; illus. in Galbally, A. & Pearce, B., Charles Conder, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2003, p.154; exhibited in Charles Conder, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 14 June - 17 August 2003; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 6 September - 9 November 2003; Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 21 November 2003 - 26 January 2004, cat.76
‘This picture is an outstanding example of ‘aesthetic eclecticism’. Conder painted an imaginative collage which draws upon eternal themes. He created a theatrical setting in which the scurrilous Commedia dell’Arte character, Scaramouche, is clearly up to no good as he observes the dalliances f others at a Fragonard - like fete galante. Other Commedia characters are seen to the left. The setting is sylvan with elegantly arranged anonymous figures subservient to the visual story. He manages to convey both the natural light of day and theatrical lighting from the wings.
There is a disproportionately high intaglioed seat which overlooks Coogee Bay. On closer inspection, it is apparent that this is not placed as an ergonomic or exercise challenge but to remind us of the location where memorable pictures were painted by Charles Conder (1868-1909), Tom Roberts (1956-1931) and Arthur Streeton (1867-1943), who later formed the Heidelberg School.
The Art Gallery of South Australia have an outstanding painting by Conder, Holiday at Mentone, which imaginatively and wittily explores form, colour, and light.
In 1890, Conder’s wish to study in Paris was fulfilled by his benevolent uncle.1 Change and transformation was afoot. There were technological, social and economic changes, not unlike today. Steam drove trains and ships. Communications were affected by printing and the telegraph. Business became global. From the 1870s, London was the centre of the money markets in the financial world. At the same time, the art market changed and became international.2 Commercial galleries started with branches in Paris, Berlin and New York. Many of the new Plutocrats and Randlords, who aspired to the English way of life, went to live in London and created a demand for of Old Master paintings. A few bought ‘modern’ painters.
The art world was in flux. Impressionists, Post-Impressionists and uncategorised others were exploring light, colour, shapes and form. Nineteenth century scientific knowledge about the physics of light allowed the artist to experiment with visual perception and note the discrepancy between this and the constraints of the palette.3 Narrative painting of the Victorian period was challenged.
By 1893, Conder changed from an emerging young painter to an artist with an established style which was recognised and praised by influential critics who included him in lists of leading ‘modern’ artists. He was described as an imaginative ‘modern’ British artist who was renowned as a colourist.
In a recent article Professor Petra ten-Doesschaute Chu selected a label for Conder’s work, ‘borrowing a term from Oscar Wilde, who defined aesthetic eclecticism as ‘the true harmony of all really beautiful things irrespective of age or place, of school or manner’…[it] allowed for the random ‘collage style’ juxtaposition of beautiful elements.’ 4
The transformation and reception of Conder’s work during the next seventeen years is best understood through the reports of his contemporaries who included: fellow artists and friends; critics who are also fellow artists; and just critics. Sir William Rothenstein (1872-1945) was a fellow student and artist in Paris. He was a lifelong friend who later became Director of the National Art School. With some vicissitudes, their friendship survived. William Rothenstein felt that nobody knew Conder as well as he. Sir John Rothenstein (1901-1920) (Keeper of the Tate Gallery, 1938-1964) recorded here his father’s view of Conder and his work when they first met:5
Rothenstein was struck rather by the personality of the large blond student than the quality of his work. His painting was then anaemic, self-consciously aesthetic, sugary, and sentimental. His drawing was even more feeble. Directly he came to Paris and his work began to develop rapidly…He and Rothenstein, with whom he lived for greater part of the year 1890…were among the few English art students who at this time associated intimately with their French confrères. One of those whom they saw most often during 1890 was Touluse Lautrec….In spite of his friendship with Lautrec and Bonnard, his admiration for Degas and Puvis de Chavannes, and intelligent interest in French contemporary painting, his own aesthetic outlook at first did not greatly change…when he first met Louis Anquetin all this was changed…[he] became the most potent influence in Conder’s life. [His work] now rapidly acquired the qualities which were to remain characteristic of it…his composition became steadily bolder and more intricate, his colour stronger and subtler….By 1893 the first phase of his painting was closed…
With this new imaginative phase [Commedia dell’Arte, Moliere and Balzac etc ] came much admiration…The Société Nationale des Beaux Artes elected him an associate member in 1893, and he exhibited there regularly.6
William Rothenstein drew attention to the significance of Conder’s oil paintings in Since Fifty Men and Memories, 1922-1938, ‘his later canvases show a bold conception and an energy to which his silk painting do not attain.  It was his early oil painting which attracted Lautrec and Anquetin rather than his slighter fans, the fans which brought popularity to Conder in England…’7
Sir John Rothenstein read many letters from Conder to his father which have not yet been published.
Rothenstein described Conder’s increased success in the first years of the twentieth century. He distilled the essence of Conder’s skills thus, ‘Never had his extraordinary capacity for organising the most complicated and subtle poses without reference to life itself shown itself so powerfully. I can think of no other English artist who could, without a single note, without preparation of any sort, carry out large and intricate designs as Conder did. He was never a good draftsman, his sense of construction was vague and faulty, yet a terrific feeling for design and atmosphere enabled him to accomplish what he did’.8
William Rothenstein drew attention to his understanding of Conder’s talent in Men and Memories 1900-1902 and particularly to Conder’s oil paintings:
‘There were qualities of Conder’s mind and art which no one, I thought, understood as I did…
In some ways Conder was more adventurous than other painters; he was instinct with inventive powers and could put down a complicated composition with extraordinary ability, giving life and beauty to his figures. His sense of physical beauty of women, of the grace of their movements, of feminine radiance, was unique - in his period at least…His art was based partly on his sense of style, of gesture, of artificial comedy, in a word the comedy of Davenant, of Congreve, and of Watteau and Fragonard; and in large measure too, on his subtle observation of actual life. Each side of his nature helped the other. He had a great feeling for form…He is one of the rare lyrical painters.’ 9
Dugald Stuart MacColl (1859-1948), the most influential art critic of the period, wrote for the Spectator (1890-1896) and the Saturday Review (1896-1906) and other publications before his appointment as Keeper of the Tate Gallery (1906-1910) and later the Wallace Collection (1911-1924).10
In the Spectator 24 June 1893, MacColl recommended a visit to the Goupil Gallery to see ‘several pictures by Mr Charles Conder, whose work at the Champs de Mars has been so remarkable these last two years for the beauty of its colour and poetry of its feeling’.
Later the same year, on 23 December in the Spectator, MacColl reviewed the Winter Exhibitions. At the New English Art Club he referred to Conder; ‘Mr Conder’s work is artistic in the sense that it is composed and subdued to accord with a scheme and sentiment.  There are no loose ends, no gossip about things; it is an attempt upon the music of nature.’
The New England Art Club is described here in the Spectator, April 27, 1895, p.579: ‘Happily, all the old fountains of art are capable of breaking out afresh, and the New English Art Club includes, in Mr Charles Conder, a poet of rare quality’.
MacColl moved to the Saturday Review and on 10 June 1899, referred to panels exhibited in London which were commissioned by Mr Siegfried Bing for his Paris Art Nouveau exhibition, when he reviewed Conder’s work, ‘here is the man who can put three colours together so that they are Spring to the eyes, and set his marionettes in strange countries that are like a regret, a desire, the scent of a flower, the pain of a song.’
MacColl reviewed an exhibition in 1910, Twenty Years of British Art at the Whitechapel Gallery. He wrote about his concern that modern English artists were not represented in official collections. However, there were two collections which did have representative modern works, one in Dublin and the other in Johannesburg which included ‘… Courbet, Puvis de Chavannes, Manet, Jongkind, Monet, the Belgian Stevens, Monticelli…and alongside of them the Englishmen who are the right company for such masters. Conder, one of the real talents of our period…; Steer, the man who stands in our time for the art of Turner and Constable…; John, and a number of younger men,…have their rightful place…The English School has been the name for sporadic genius in the past, it is more descriptive now as a title than ever before’. 11
Soon after Conder’s death in 1910, Frank Gibson wrote Charles Conder: his Life and Work. There was an unsigned review (probably MacColl) in the Spectator from December 13, 1913, p.23. The reviewer described here Conder’s pictures more broadly:
This volume forms a worthy tribute to an exceptional talent. Conder took little heed of the actual world, but created one of his own, which he delighted to paint. This world was in truth the world of the stage, not a scene from the audience, but a country constructed out of theatrical properties. But what made it new and original was that it was always perfect in artistic taste. With an unerring instinct Conder saw that to people this land with actual human beings would be absurd. He therefore constructed people on the same principle as the pasteboard trees and buildings which have no substance, and out of these strange materials he evolved fantasies of exquisite grace. But the crowning gift of this artist was his sense of colour; in this he was never at fault, and with unerring instinct he could always command effects that as beautiful as they were subtle…It is early to talk of immortality, but if Conder lives it will be in virtue of his gifts as a colourist.12
T. Martin Wood, in The Studio, reviewed a commission from an important patron, Sir Edmund Davis.
The selection of no other artist to fill these panels could have been so successful as that of Mr Conder…by his panels the eye is engaged, the intelligence aroused, but only to a point; a story is told, a drama is enacted in them which is never finished. There is a purpose about the actions of the figure which evades us, and this elusiveness gives us rest….we are not called upon to look into our memory for history, we are not put out of court in the matter of subject by ignorance of their legend, we are not teased with symbolism….his methods are charmingly indefinite in their refinements of escaping tone…in their delicate colour. Beauty with him in those panels is light and decadent; they are full of fancy, crowded with images, pictures and memories of faded things. Mr Conder gives to us an escape into the refinement of pleasure of an hour departed. This is the sentiment of his designs; it is part of the delicate manner of his expression, and it lies behind the remarkable colour that early brought him to fame.13’

Waite James Clarkeview full entry
Reference: see Menzies Art Brands auction, 26 September, 2019, lot LOT 29:
JAMES CLARKE WAITE
Melbourne 1888

oil on canvas
103.5 x 153.0 cm

signed lower right: J C Waite
signed and inscribed on stretcher verso: "Melbourne/ J. C. Waite RBA
Provenance:
Private collection
Christie's, Melbourne, 12 March 1971, lot 156 (as Port Melbourne)
Mr & Mrs Julian & Miriam Sterling, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne
Reference:
The Argus, Melbourne, 11 September 1888, p.33
'The Melbourne Exhibition', The Illustrated Sydney News, Sydney, 27 September 1888, p.6
Colquhoun, A., 'Pictures on View. Mr. J.C. Waite Exhibition', The Herald, Melbourne, 16 July 1914, p.10
Colquhoun, A., 'Mr. J.C. Waite's Paintings', The Herald, Melbourne, 16 February 1920, p.10
'Art of J.C. Waite', The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 7 September 1921, p.7
Exhibited:
Centennial International Exhibition, Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 1 August 1888 - 31 January 1889, no.132
J.C. Waite, R.B.A., Guild Hall, Melbourne, 11 April - 2 May 1908, no.2 (as View of Melbourne (Before the Boom)
J.C. Waite, Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 31 July 1914
Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 16 - 28 February 1920, no.1 (as Yarra, Melbourne)
Catalogue of Paintings by J C. Waite, R.B.A., Anthony Hordern & Sons, Sydney, 17 September 1921
‘James Clarke Waite’s Melbourne 1888 shows a section of the Yarra River from the south wharf looking east toward the city centre. Like Fred McCubbin’s (1855-1917) better known painting from that year Melbourne in 1888, a work subsequently cut in half, Waite’s picture focuses on the large vessels that could now safely travel up the river to the turning circle in front of Customs House. The painting was enthusiastically singled out by contemporary critics for its restrained mid-Victorian style and for chronicling the transformation of Melbourne’s city centre and docklands into a thriving metropolis.
Melbourne in the 1880s was a growing maritime city. Its economy had been greatly enhanced by the widening and deepening of the Yarra River – a process that had commenced in the 1870s and was finally completed in 1887.
During this time, the Yarra River, south of present-day Princes Bridge, had become a favourite subject for artists. Older, established colonial painters such as Louis Buvelot (1814-1888) depicted the small pockets of nature still remaining along the increasingly busy banks of the river. New arrivals such as the Italian Ugo Catani (1859-1944) painted gritty, grey and steam-laden scenes, portraying the grime and sludge emanating from Melbourne’s rapid industrialisation. Australian Impressionist artists, Arthur Streeton (1867-1943), Tom Roberts (1856-1931) and McCubbin, found a visual poetry in the rich cacophony of colours, changing light and atmospheric effects found along the river.  
In his painting, J.C. Waite was equally concerned with evoking Melbourne’s maritime culture as well as providing a realistic description of the adjacent city centre. The work was titled A View of Melbourne when it was first shown at the Melbourne Centennial International Exhibition from August 1888 to January 1889. It was an apt title. The Centennial exhibition had been organised to celebrate a century of European settlement in Australia, with a focus on advances made in music and painting.
Art critics were quick to praise the work of those artists who they felt best represented the city and its achievements. Melbourne was placed in this category and compared with Fred McCubbin’s riverside masterpiece The City’s Toil 1887; a work hung adjacent to it. In Melbourne, the four-sided Town Hall clocktower is clearly visible in the distance. Beyond that, to the right, are the Gothic spires of Scots’ and other Melbourne churches including The Independent. There is also the incomplete St Paul’s Cathedral which was situated on the eastern corner of Swanston and Flinders Street – work had halted there in 1888 and its iconic spires were not built until several decades later – along with other prominent buildings and landmarks.
Kept in the artist’s possession, Melbourne was re-exhibited on four separate occasions in the 1910s and 20s. According to the Herald critic, it was ‘the principle picture’ in a ‘large and varied collection’ of works that was assembled for a private viewing at the Guild Hall, Melbourne, in 1908. Renamed View of Melbourne (Before the Boom), the writer found favour with the ‘striking sense of realism’, while noting that it ‘predated Prell’s buildings and other skyscrapers [that had since] appeared’.1 Critic, A. Colquhoun also claimed the work as one of the most prominent in an exhibition held at the Athenaeum Gallery six years later. Waite was commended for his ‘dignity and sincerity’ as a painter and Melbourne specifically singled out for its ‘historical interest as recording the change which the years have made in the city skyline.’2
English born and trained, J.C. Waite commanded high prices for his work when he established himself in Victoria from 1886. Noted for his ‘conscientious work and quiet style’, he was seen to excel in portraiture, genre painting and landscape. Melbourne 1888 is one of his largest and most ambitious Australian landscapes. It has an interesting and varied exhibition history that reflects how attitudes toward art and the urban milieu changed as they progressed into the twentieth century.
Footnotes
1. Herald, 10 April 1908, p.2
2. Colquhoun, A., Herald, 16 July 1914, p.10
Rodney James BA (Hons) MA’
Brown Edith Bell (1864-1946)view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons auction, Sydney, 15.9.19:
Sale 137 Lot 1286A
BROWN, Edith Bell (1864-1946) (26) Views of Old Sydney & The Rocks. Three inscribed & one signed, some dated 1909-1911. Ex Estate Late J H Burden, Lawsons 23/11/1993 (lot 1). Playfair St, Looking South, Dec 1910 (32.5x20cm); The Old Shop, The Rocks (21x15.5cm); Old Houses, The Rocks (22.5x31.5cm); The Sardine Box, No 8 Clarence Lane (24x16.5cm); Bettington St 1910, Parties Buildings (23.5x14.5cm); Gloucester St. Ship and Mermaid Hotel 1910 (21x14cm); Playfair St, Old Sydney, pencil (36x24cm); Old Cottage, Trinity Avenue 1909 (24x14.5 cm); Old Shop, Cnr Cumberland & Essex Sts, (16.5x24cm); Back of Sailor's Return, Cambridge St (175.x26cm); Harrington St 1911 (18x28cm); Old Houses, Sydney (19.5x32cm); George Street North, 1910 (21x15cm); Old Houses, Sydney (22x29cm); Old Stove, Sussex St Nos 426 & 428 (19.5x25cm); Looking Towards the Argyle Cut, (32x24cm); Cumberland St, Sydney (17x26.5cm); 2, 4 & 6 Harrington St, April 1911 (13.5x23cm); Trinity Avenue, 1911 (17x24cm); Old Houses, Sydney (31.5x22cm); 118 Cumberland St, Looking South (18.5x28cm); Old Bird Shop Cnr, Argyle & Cambridge Sts (28x22cm); George St North, 1910 (17x24cm); Cumberland St, Looking North (24x31.5cm); George St North, 1910 (17x24cm); Cumberland Street, Looking North (23.5x2cm length). Collection Dr John Raven, Perth.
Estimate $400-700
Fabian Erwinview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Hearld, Good Weekend, artiicle by John McDonald
September 13, 2019: ‘At 103, there is no slowing sculptor Erwin Fabian down’. - Lives: Albert Park, Melbourne. Age: 103. Represented by: Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney; Australian Galleries, Melbourne.
His thing.
Abstract sculptures in metal and wood.
Our take.
Erwin Fabian was born in Berlin in 1915 into an artistic family, and grew up during the years of the Weimar Republic. In 1938 he left for England, from where he would be deported on that infamous, overcrowded ship, the Dunera. Although Fabian’s first experience of Australia was an internment camp in Hay, in rural NSW, he conceived an affection for this country, and would make it his permanent home from 1962.
One might imagine that an artist who will turn 104 this year would be doing something suitably modest, but Fabian is a sculptor who works in steel and wood. It requires a considerable physical effort to make such pieces, yet this compact, brawny man has energy to burn.
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Fabian’s wooden works are solid groupings of sliced tree trunks that make no attempt to disguise their origins. Their monumentality is in striking contrast to the new works in steel, which are as lyrical as anything Fabian has made, with thin bands of metal that seem to ripple in space.
The bases are particularly impressive, as these heavy constructions touch the ground so lightly. Works such as Keeping the Balance or Beginning and End are as graceful as dancers propped on their toes.
Can I afford it?
If Fabian had chosen to live and work in Germany, he might be commanding higher prices than he does in Australia, where sculpture has always been undervalued. The most expensive work in this show is Coronation (144cm x 66cm x 68cm), a metal structure with a serpentine curve, topped by a fractured sphere that acts as a crown.
The price is $110,000, which equals the artist’s current record. The cheapest work, at $22,000, is Bushphone (98cm x 40cm x 45cm, pictured),  a lumpen tower made from four sturdy blocks of wood.

Where can I have a squiz?
Robin Gibson Gallery, 278 Liverpool Street, Darlinghurst, Sydney. Until October 2; robingibson.net.
Younger Nancyview full entry
Reference: see Ramblin Rose Auction Co
September 15, 2019, US, NANCY YOUNGER
Lot 93: 1997 NANCY YOUNGER HARBOUR LIGHTS LIGHTHOUSE "MACQUARIE LIGHTHOUSE" AUSTRALIA #197-HAND SIGNED. Description: IN ORIGINAL BOX. APPROX 6" TALL X 6 1/2" LONG.
Artist or Maker: NANCY YOUNGER
Date: 1997.
model.
Goerg Edouard Josephview full entry
Reference: see Simpson Galleries auction, LLC
September 21, 2019, 1:00 PM CST
Houston, TX, US, lot 335, ÉDOUARD JOSEPH GOERG (Australian 1893-1969) A MACABRE DRYPOINT ETCHING, "Witches Bathing in the Valley," ink on paper, signed in monogram in plate, "E.G.," and signed in pencil in margin "Ed. Goerg," and numbered 200/200. 17 3/4" x 12 5/8"
Carmichael John Wilsonview full entry
Reference: see DAWSON'S AUCTIONEERS, UK, 21 Sept 2019 lot 76: John (James) Wilson Carmichael (1800-1868) British
depicting a maritime scene of three seamen ashore pulling part of a shipwreck out of an agitated sea by a rocky mountain, signed and dated lower left 'J.W.Carmichael 1867', within a moulded gilt wooden frame, oil on canvas, 38 cm x 54.5 cm.

A pupil of Thomas Miles I Richardson, Carmichael had a good understanding of landscapes and maritime subjects, and travelled to the Baltic, Italy and Holland to inspire himself of the views. Whilst living in London, he exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1835-59, the Suffolk Street Gallery from 1838 and the British Institution from 1846, and became an acclaimed artist for his marine paintings. Today his works can be seen at Greenwich, National Maritime museum, Newcastle, Gateshead and the National Gallery of Australia.
Martin-Brown Kirsty Anne Napanangka view full entry
Reference: from website Artlandlish, 10 Papuana St, Kununurra, WA, Australia: Kirsty Anne Napanangka Martin-Brown was born in Alice Springs Hospital, the closest hospital to Nyirripi, a remote Aboriginal community 450km north-west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. She is the daughter of Agnes Nampijinpa Brown and the grand-daughter of Molly Napurrurla Martin, both artists working with the Warlukurlangu Art Centre. She has one brother and one sister. Kirsty attended school in Nyirripi and in Yuendumu, a remote Aboriginal community 150km south-east of Nyirripi, before going to Kormilda College, an Aboriginal boarding college in Darwin. When she finished school she returned to Nyirripi where she first worked at the Nyirripi store and then at the Childcare Centre. She has two children.
Kirsty has been painting with Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation, located in Yuendumu, since 2005. Warlukurlangu Artists provides an outlet for Warlpiri artists to paint their cultural heritage and earn income from their work. This service is extended to Nyirripi artists, on a weekly basis, by delivering canvas and paint to artists and picking up finished artwork. Kirsty paints her Mina Mina Jukurrpa, Dreaming passed down on her father’s side. These stories, which relate directly to her land, its features and the fauna and flora that inhabit it, have been passed down for millennia. “I learnt about my culture…I know my dreaming. I feel proud and closer to my culture when I paint my country.” Kirsty uses traditional iconography with an unrestricted palette to develop a modern interpretation of her traditional culture.
When she’s not painting or working she likes to play softball or basketball as well as going hunting with friends.
Publishing details: Artlandlish, 10 Papuana St, Kununurra, WA, Australia, 2019
Brown Kirsty Anne Napanangka view full entry
Reference: from website Artlandlish, 10 Papuana St, Kununurra, WA, Australia: ‘ Kirsty Anne Napanangka Martin-Brown was born in Alice Springs Hospital, the closest hospital to Nyirripi, a remote Aboriginal community 450km north-west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. She is the daughter of Agnes Nampijinpa Brown and the grand-daughter of Molly Napurrurla Martin, both artists working with the Warlukurlangu Art Centre. She has one brother and one sister. Kirsty attended school in Nyirripi and in Yuendumu, a remote Aboriginal community 150km south-east of Nyirripi, before going to Kormilda College, an Aboriginal boarding college in Darwin. When she finished school she returned to Nyirripi where she first worked at the Nyirripi store and then at the Childcare Centre. She has two children.
Kirsty has been painting with Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation, located in Yuendumu, since 2005. Warlukurlangu Artists provides an outlet for Warlpiri artists to paint their cultural heritage and earn income from their work. This service is extended to Nyirripi artists, on a weekly basis, by delivering canvas and paint to artists and picking up finished artwork. Kirsty paints her Mina Mina Jukurrpa, Dreaming passed down on her father’s side. These stories, which relate directly to her land, its features and the fauna and flora that inhabit it, have been passed down for millennia. “I learnt about my culture…I know my dreaming. I feel proud and closer to my culture when I paint my country.” Kirsty uses traditional iconography with an unrestricted palette to develop a modern interpretation of her traditional culture.
When she’s not painting or working she likes to play softball or basketball as well as going hunting with friends.’ [Paintings have been used for shirt designs for Bamboo Dreaming, Warlukurlangu Aboriginal Artists Corporation.]
Publishing details: Artlandlish, 10 Papuana St, Kununurra, WA, Australia, 2019
Unsworth Kenview full entry
Reference: KEN UNSWORTH by ANTHONY BOND [’Sculptor, installation and performance artist,Unsworth was born in 1931 in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond. Despite growing up as a self-described typical Melbourne kid who loved football, trams and a beer, Unsworth has become one of Australia's most significant contemporary artists. Ken Unsworth was born in Melbourne in 1931. He studied at the University of Melbourne, Melbourne Teachers College, and the National Art School, Sydney. He has held several teaching positions, including Lecturer in Sculpture, Sydney College of Advanced Education. Unsworth has had numerous solo exhibitions, in Australia and overseas, including a major survey exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1998. His works have been included in the Mildura Sculpture Triennial, 1973 and 1978; the Australian Sculpture Triennial, Melbourne, 1981, 1984 and 1993; Australian Perspecta, Sydney, 1981, 1985, 1987 and 1988; and the Biennale of Sydney, 1976, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1990 and 2000. He has also participated in major international exhibitions including the Paris Biennale, 1985; Magiciens de la Terre, Paris, 1989; and the Biennale of Istanbul, Turkey, 1995. In 1978 Unsworth represented Australia at the Venice Biennale. Unsworth has received numerous awards including the Bi-centenary Sculpture Competition Award in 1970, and the DAAD Scholarship, Berlin, in 1987. In 1989 he was awarded an Australian Creative Fellowship, and was made a Member of the Order of Australia for service to sculpture. Ken Unsworth lives in Sydney.’]

Publishing details: Dott Publishing, HardCover, 2018, Fabric-covered hardback and PVC dust-jacket 6 x 6pp gatefolds, 1 x 8pp gatefold
Ref: 1000
O’Connor Kathleenview full entry
Reference: Kathleen O’Connor of Paris by Amanda Curtin. [’What does it mean to live a life in pursuit of art? In 1906, Kathleen O’Connor left conservative Perth, where her famous father’s life had ended in tragedy. She had her sights set on a career in thrilling, bohemian Paris. More than a century later, novelist Amanda Curtin faces her own questions, of life and of art, as she embarks on a journey in Kate’s footsteps.
Part biography, part travel narrative, this is the story of an artist in a foreign land who, with limited resources and despite the impacts of war and loss, worked and exhibited in Paris for over forty years. Kate’s distinctive figure paintings, portraits and still lifes, highly prized today, form an inseparable part of the telling.
‘]
Publishing details: Fremantle Press, 2018, 320pp
Jones Jonathanview full entry
Reference: barrangal dyara (skin and bones), (2016) by Jonathan Jones -
[’This catalogue recovers fragments of the lost story of Sydney’s Garden Palace and its intersecting histories through an investigation of ideas around architecture, landscape, collection and display, language and cultural identity. Celebrating the resilience and survival of the world’s oldest living cultures, barrangal dyara (skin and bones) is at the forefront of a long-awaited acknowledgement and renaissance of Indigenous culture and language in Australia.
This beautifully designed publication is richly illustrated throughout, featuring over 100 large-scale historical and contemporary images and illustrations. Edited by Genevieve O'Callaghan, it includes original essays and interviews with leading Aboriginal writers including Bruce Pascoe – winner of two 2016 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards – Jeanine Leane, Hetti Perkins and Uncle Stan Grant Sr AM, alongside Australian academics Ross Gibson, Peter Kohane, Ilaria Vanni Accarigi and barrangal dyara (skin and bones) curator Emma Pike.’]
[’For the 32nd Kaldor Public Art Project Wiradjuri/Kamilaroi artist Jonathan Jones presented barrangal dyara (skin and bones), a vast sculptural installation stretching across 20,000 square-metres of the Royal Botanic Garden. 

The Project recalled the 19th century Garden Palace building where it originally stood in Sydney’s Royal Botanic Garden, before it devastatingly burnt to the ground along with countless Aboriginal objects collected along the colonial frontier. The project was Jones’ response to the immense loss felt throughout Australia due to the destruction of these culturally significant items. It represented an effort to commence a healing process and a celebration of the survival of the world’s oldest living culture despite this traumatic event.

Thousands of bleached white shields echoed masses of rubble—the only remnants of the building after the fire—and raised the layered history and bones of the Garden Palace across the site. A native kangaroo grassland formed the heart of the installation, and was enlivened by presentations of Indigenous language, performances, talks, special events and workshops each day.

The project connects directly with many Aboriginal communities throughout the south-east of Australia, who collaborated to reframe local history. The artwork took its name, barrangal dyara, meaning ‘skin and bones,’ from the local Sydney Gadigal language, on whose country the project took place with approval from the community.

Members of Aboriginal communities are respectfully advised that content about this exhibition refers to the loss of cultural objects from across the south-east of Australia.

barrangal dyara (skin and bones)
17 September – 3 October 2016
Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney

Sydney's Forgotten Ancestor  Historic Photography Exhibition
17 September - 3 October 2016
Palm House, Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney 
Spot Fire Symposia Series
Landscape and language
7 May 2016
State Library of New South Wales

Spectacle, manifestation, performance
16 July 2016
Art Gallery of New South Wales

Loss and resilience
6 August 2016
Australian Museum


Play the audio described tour of barrangal dyara (skin and bones) for the blind and vision impaired here.’]
[’
[’Sydney-based Aboriginal artist Jonathan Jones, a member of the Wiradjuri and Kamilaroi nations of south-east Australia, works across a range of mediums, from printmaking and drawing to sculpture and film. He creates site-specific installations and interventions into space that use light, subtle shadow and the repetition of shape and materiality to explore Indigenous practices, relationships and ideas. Jones often works with everyday materials, such as fluorescent lights and blue tarpaulin, recycled and repurposed to explore relationships between community and the individual, the personal and public, historical and contemporary. He has worked on several major public art commissions, including the Commonwealth Parliament Offices in Sydney and Wagga Wagga Regional Airport.

In past projects Jones has sought to represent both the traditional and contemporary by working with the particular site’s historical usage and current vision. Often perceived as oppositional, these two frameworks are in fact linked, sharing commonalities and connections; Jones’ artworks serve to honour both contexts. At the heart of Jones’ practice is the act of collaborating, and many projects have seen him work in conjunction with other artists and communities to develop outcomes that acknowledge local knowledge systems to connect the site with local concerns.

Jones has exhibited both nationally and internationally: in Australia at Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation, Sydney, and the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, and overseas at the Palazzo delle Papesse Contemporary Art Centre, Siena, Italy, and Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art, Winnipeg, Canada, among others.
‘]
Publishing details: Kaldor Art Projects,
Ref: 1000
Foundview full entry
Reference: FOUND - GUNYBI GANAMBARR
DJIRRIRRI WUNUNGMURRA ~ RALWURRANDJI WANAMBI
BANGGAWUY WANAMBI ~ DHURRUMUWUY MARIKA ~ GALUMA MAYMURU - NGALKUMA BURARRWANGA ~ WUKUN WANAMBI ~ YALANBA WANAMBI, multi-media works,        barks, sculpture, In association with Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre
Tirrkala NE Arnhem Land
Publishing details: Compiled and published by Annandale Galleries (Annandale, Sydney, NSW) on the occasion of the exhibition FOUND held at Annandale Galleries from 24 July - 31 August 2013. Heavily illustrated with full-colour photographs of exhibition artworks.


Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see FOUND - GUNYBI GANAMBARR
DJIRRIRRI WUNUNGMURRA ~ RALWURRANDJI WANAMBI
BANGGAWUY WANAMBI ~ DHURRUMUWUY MARIKA ~ GALUMA MAYMURU - NGALKUMA BURARRWANGA ~ WUKUN WANAMBI ~ YALANBA WANAMBI, multi-media works,        barks, sculpture, In association with Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre
Tirrkala NE Arnhem Land
Publishing details: Compiled and published by Annandale Galleries (Annandale, Sydney, NSW) on the occasion of the exhibition FOUND held at Annandale Galleries from 24 July - 31 August 2013. Heavily illustrated with full-colour photographs of exhibition artworks.


Dunbar Jack Lanaganview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald 20.9.2019, Arts p6, for article on the artist winning the 2019 Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship.
Read Richardview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Miss Julia Johnston (1803-1879) on the Grounds of Annandale, Sydney, NSW 1824 Richard Read Senior (c1765-c1831)
Watercolour and pencil on paper
34.5 x 25.5 cm
Signed and dated R READ 1824 in pencil lower right. SOLD
Governor Macquarie’s arrival in Sydney, Britain’s furthest colony, and island gaol, late in 1809 was the beginning of a significant change for Australia. The harbour and town was described as ‘A charming object from the water’ but the reality was far different. At the end of his term as the 5th Governor of NSW, Macquarie defended his program of public works by stating that “All was in a most ruinous state of decay”. Macquarie had an immense impact on the penal colony. He developed the first urban planning scheme with regulations. His tenure in Sydney paved the way for emancipists and immigrants wanting to begin a new life. The Consecration of St James Church in 1824 marked the end of Macquarie’s building projects, and the beginning of a new
era for Australia. Sydney was beginning to transition from a convict colony into a civilized free society with prospects for education, order and trade.
Richard Read Senior, who arrived in 1813, is regarded as the first painter to successfully introduce portraiture to the colony of NSW. He bolstered his reputation in the colony by stating that he was taught by the British artist Sir Joshua Reynolds.
John Lewin before him advertised in 1808 his skills in ‘painting a correct likeness’ but unfortunately the fledgling colony did not have the social or financial clout to support him.
Julia Johnston (1803-1879) was the daughter of George and Esther Johnston. George Johnston arrived in the colony in 1788 as the commander of the marine detachment sent to guard the new colony. He met Esther, a convict during the voyage to Australia and they had seven children together. Infamously, George Johnston was one of the ringleaders who overthrew Governor Bligh.This ended his Military Career. Johnston’s fruitful friendship with Governor Macquarie ensured that the family lived a lavish life that was to be passed on to
his family after his death in 1823. Julia was the second eldest daughter and was born on the Johnston estate ‘Annandale’ in 1803.This portrait was completed in 1824 marks her 21st year of life and importantly is a record of the family estate and their social status in Sydney. Julia, dressed in her best, a blue silk dress, holding her bonnet, ivory capped walking stick and accompanied by a small domestic dog, is standing close to her Family vault designed by Francis Greenway on the grounds of the family property, Annandale, an icon in early Sydney.
This portrait epitomises the desires of the new generation of Australians, those who became wealthy landowners, looking to release the bonds of a convict or military past. It is the beginning of a new age in Australia, and Richard Read has captured it superbly. The harsh light of Australia is evident, as is the landscape setting. A glimpse of Sydney Harbour is visible in the distance, over the plains.Very few early Australian
colonial portraits are set on an identifiable backdrop.The inclusion of the family vault and picket fence in the composition place this on the family property Annandale, now in the suburb known as Annandale. A late 19th century photograph of the property verify the composition of the backdrop. The vault holds the remains of her recently deceased father and brother, a pictorial celebration of the love for her family. The painting moved with Julia to her sister’s home‘Horsley Park’. It remained here until the late 20th century.A photograph attributed to Henry King captured the painting next to the fire place in the sitting room in the late 19th century. (ML PXA 559)
One of the finest surviving and unusual Australian colonial portraits. Painted between the transition of Sydney as a penal colony, and Sydney as a civilised society.

Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Meadows Lucyview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Lucy Meadows (British dates unknown) RIGHT: Portrait of Richard Butler Watercolour on buff board
31.5 x 25 cm
Housed in a colonial timber frame
ABOVE: Annie Butler (Larchin)
Watercolour on buff board (Oval)
31.5 x 25 cm
Signed and dated Lucy Meadows, Sept 1859 centre Right.
Housed in a colonial timber frame.
Both Portraits are illustrated in Eve Buncombe’s book ‘Artists in Early Australia and their Portraits’ Annie Larchin is illustrated in the front piece (Attributed to Frederick Frith- D12/4 and Richard is illustrated on page 373 D12/5 also attributed to Frederick Frith.
Annie Larchin and Richard Butler married in West Ham in England on the 2/8/1859.They travelled to England to be married, taking with them, their local church minister to conduct the marriage ceremony. The portraits of Annie and Richard were painted a month after their marriage, and were likely to have been a wedding memento to take back home to Tasmania.
Lucy Meadows appears to have been a founding member of ‘The Society of Female Artists’. A response to the male dominated Royal Academy. She is mentioned in a Sydney Morning Herald ar ticle (11 September 1857, Page 3) that quotes an ar ticle in The Spectator (6 June 1857) regarding the society’s first exhibition:
“Miss Lucy Meadows and Mrs E Dalton may be mentioned as contributors of figure pieces, figures of heads evidencing or promising superior ability.”
It is possible that Annie discovered The Society of Female Ar tists and Lucy Meadows through the article in the Sydney Morning Herald.As the portrait ofAnnie is signed and dated,it is reasonable to assume that she was the party involved in the commissioning of the portraits.
The life and dates of Lucy Meadows are unclear.The Essex Standard reported (12 August 1863) that Lucy Chapman, the second daughter of the Rev WSH Meadows, was soon to be married. She is a possible candidate for Lucy Chapman Meadows, is shown as being married during the third quarter of 1863, at Epping, in the county of Essex.

Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Costantini Charles Henry Theodore (1803-1860)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Charles Henry Theodore Costantini (1803-1860) Portrait of Mary Tame 1854
22 cm x 17 cm
Watercolour and ink on buff board
SOLD
Charles Henry Theodore Costantini was a convict portrait and landscape painter. Her arrived
in Australia after being convicted of larceny in London in 1823. He spent most of his time in Tasmania between Hobart and Launceston. His surviving works are a great example of Australian folk art.
Mary Tame was born in Melbourne in 1850. Her family migrated to Hobart some time prior to meeting Costantini in 1854.This portrait was painted with the family cat in Hobart in 1854 when Mary was four years old. Mary later married William Latham in Hobart and they had one child a daughter ‘Elvie May Latham’. Mary Latham died in Hobart in 1919.
The work was held in the collection of family descendants until the early 21st century. It is Signed CHT Costantini Pinx- ......1854 lower right.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Johnstone Henry James (1835-1907)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Henry James Johnstone (1835-1907) The Pressing Question 1874
Oil on canvas
54 x 42 cm
Inscribed verso with signature and number2.
Housed in an ornate gilt frame- possibly a replica of an Issac Whitehead moulding.
A Pressing Question painted in 1874 embodies the culture of life on the land in 19th century Australia.
Painted for theVictorianAcademy of theArts exhibition in 1874,and titled‘Wooed andWon’the work was compared with other Romantic genre paintings from ‘The motherland’.
The painting made such an impact on the proprietors of the Australian Illustrated News, that they purchased it from the exhibition and commissioned Samuel Calvert to produce a colour print only months later.The title seems to have changed with the months between August to December, presumably with the artists approval.The new title ‘A Pressing Question’ was made public via the Christmas colour supplement.
The distinctly Australian landscape backdrop and the sense of colonial life on the land set it apart as a painting that defined an era.
Establishing a life in rural Australia in the 19th century was a tough proposition.The stockman depicted is a great metaphor of this. His second love (the horse) and trusty work companion is settled next to the rustic hut in the background. He stands with one hand over the fence barrier, clutching the hand of his love, starring intensely at her awaiting for approval. His other hand is clutching his stockwhip, a tool of equal importance that provides a passage to his life on the land. The metaphorical use of intertwined trees and fence railings compositionally establishes their love for one another.
This painting is one of the finest surviving works providing an insight into the culture of love and life on the land in 19th century Australia.
“From the very beginning of his art work, Mr Johnstone displayed a great power of depicting the peculiar characteristics of Australian scenery and Australian men and women. Previous to 1874 he had painted ‘Old Mates’ Fire Light Reflection’ and ‘A Pressing Question’ which the latter was reproduced in The Australian News and was one of the best specimens of colour printing which up to that period had been executed in the colony. It represents a stockman, whip in one hand, while with the other he grasps the palm of an Australian maiden and asks her to be his wife”
Extract from:Victorian Artists in London | H J Johnstone | Leader (Melbourne) Sat 10th October 1891 page 39 | Fine Arts
Griffith William attribview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
ABOVE: Portrait of Rebecca
53 x 43 cm
Oil on canvas
Label verso: Rebecca Small..... at Sydney Australia 22 September 1789, married Francis Oakes..... .......... 26 January 1806. Died at Parramatta 30 Jan 1883 aged 94.
She is reported to have been the first white girl born in Australia.
RIGHT: Portrait of Francis
53 x 43 cm
Oil on canvas
Label Verso: Francis Oakes Pioneer Missionary in Australia born at Foleshill Coventry England 15th April 1770. Married 26(7) January Rebecca Small of Sydney. He died 15 February 1844 in Parramatta aged 74 years.
Painted c1845-50 the pair of portraits presenting Rebecca and Francis Oakes are attributed to William Griffith. Griffith was a Parramatta identity who gained local recognition in 1844 by painting a well-received full length portrait of Sir William Westbrook Burton, Supreme Court Judge and legislative councillor of NSW.
William Griffith’s surviving portraits predominately depict local identities in the Parramatta region. He was featured in local papers of the period c1844, but does not seem to have advertised his practice as far as the city of Sydney. His primary method of advertising his portrait practice seems to have been through a“Portrait Club”in the rooms ofTheAustralianArms Inn,on George Street owned by John McKay. He was also known to have resided in accommodation owned by the Kings School. It is likely that he received commissions from local families wanting portraits of their members for future generations to enjoy.
Unfortunately, he received some criticism for copying well known artist works and for his work in oil. Evidently his preferred medium was French pastel (charcoal and chalk). Good examples of his pastel work exist in the portraits of Elizabeth and Richard Rouse from 1847 in the Rouse Hill Collection.The Mitchell Library collection also holds several beautifully rendered pastel works. The pair of works that depict Rebecca and Francis Oakes were painted c1850. It is plausible that the works were commission by Rebecca Oakes after an earlier painting of her husband.
This may have been for posterity, for one of her many children, or as a piece of nostalgia for herself.A photograph of a painting in the Mitchell Library collection (P3/125) depicts Francis Oakes in a very similar pose.
Another work unattributed in the Mitchell Library is possibly by Griffith, a portrait of Reverend John Eyre. (ML 12) The treatment of the background and figure is stylistically similar.This painting has a very heavy layer of varnish coating the painting.
This painting of Eyre I believe is mentioned in an article (see Portrait of Rev. Eyre below) along with the mention of a pair of portraits of Francis and Rebecca Oakes by the same artist.
Eve Buscombe discusses William Griffith and a pair of Oakes portraits of the same size on page 249 of ‘Artists In Early Australia And Their Portraits’.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Nicholas William (1809-1854)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
William Nicholas (1809-1854)
Portrait of Mrs Ann Hordern 1852
23 cm x 19 cm
Watercolour and pencil on buff card Signed and dated ‘William Nicholas 1852’ $5500
A brilliantly rendered portrait in pencil and watercolour on buff card.The sitter is considered to be Ann Hordern (Woodhead) (1794-1871). A lady whose business as a dress maker, laid the foundations for her son Anthony Hordern’s department store empire. Mrs Ann Hordern who passed away at the age of 79, would have been 60 years old when this portrait was drawn.The fact that Nicholas signed and dated the work implies that he was hoping for a larger commission. In good condition housed in the original gilt frame.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Berkeley Martha (1813-1899) attribview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Attributed to Martha Berkeley (1813-1899) Berkeley Family Portrait c 1850
Watercolour on buff card
25.5 x 36 cm
$9500
The Chauncy sisters,Martha Berkeley andTheresaWalker,were SouthAustralia’s first professional artists.They arrived from Britain at the site of the colony’s capital Adelaide, on the 10th of February 1837, six weeks after the proclamation of the province in 1836.
Both sisters were London trained miniature portraitists. Berkeley’s teacher was probably the French portrait painter Pierre Mejanel. They were serious artists, who exhibited at the most prestigious exhibition venue in the British Empire,The Royal Academy. In Adelaide the sisters presented works at the first exhibition held in the colony in 1847 alongside works by S.T. Gill, George Hamilton and John Michael Skipper. Berkeley showed seventeen works, including portraits and landscapes.
Martha Berkeley produced some of South Australia’s most important early colonial works of
art. Her known paintings are predominantly South Australian portraits or landscapes of the area surrounding Adelaide.
Berkeley was probably the first Australian woman to paint works that recognised and integrated the indigenous people in the landscape. South Australia at the time took pride in a compassionate stance towards the local indigenous population, having developed specific legislation for their protection. Unfortunately, these good intentions were overtaken by colonial expansion.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Cotton John (1802-1849)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
John Cotton (1802-1849)
The Goulburn Ranges, Doogallook c1844 26 cm x 37 cm
Ink on paper
$5000
A beautiful record of The Goulburn Ranges near Doogallook, a station that was run by Cotton that comprised of 30,000 acres.
The drawing relates to a period in 1844 when Cotton was preparing a book tentatively titled ‘Birds of Port Phillip District New South Wales’.The book was never published in his lifetime. His sketchbooks depicting the content was published in 1974, along with addition drawings depicting his life on Doogallook.This sketchbook resides in the State Library of Victoria. Page 22 of this book titled ‘John Cotton’s Birds of The Por t Phillip District Of
New South Wales 1843-1849’ depicts a drawing that
bears a resemblance.The figure on the right is speculated
by the family to be John Cotton himself overlooking the
range. Our drawing appears to be from the 1844 period
of ink works, and given the history of family ownership
of the piece was likely chosen from his sketchbooks as a
family memento.
An interesting fact about Cotton was that he was the Grandfather of Ellis Rowen, one of the most talented and stout personalities of colonial Australian art history.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Friend Mary Ann (1800-1838)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Mary Ann Friend (1800-1838) Georgetown Lighthouse and Signal Station c1836
18.5 cm x 16.5 cm
Watercolour on paper
Possibly the only surviving painting of the original convict built Lighthouse and timber signal station at Low Head near Georgetown,Tasmania.
The attribution to the artist Mary Ann Friend is derived from a pair of labels attached to the work.
Colonel William Paterson arrived on the 16th of February 1804 aboard HMS Buffalo as the newly appointed Lieutenant Governor ofVan Diemen’s Land with the first settlers.The first navigation marker he installed at Low Head was a simple flagpole in 1804. Later that year, Paterson established a pilot station and signal station in the sheltered bay below Low Head. He also installed a fire beacon at Low Head to mark the hazardous entrance of the Tamar River. When a vessel was sighted after sunset, a fire would be lit and attended all night by convicts to allow the vessel to maintain sight of the port.
Australia’s first lighthouse, Macquarie Lighthouse in Vaucluse, NSW was lit in 1793. Australia’s second lighthouse, Iron Pot Lighthouse at the entrance to the River Derwent was lit in 1832. Low Head Lighthouse, constructed by convict labour and first lit on the 27th of December 1833, became Tasmania’s second and only the third one to be built in Australia.The station is situated 7km North of Georgetown and 50 km from Launceston on the East side of the Tamar River.
The 1833 lighthouse was designed by Colonial Architect John Lee Archer.The construction was overseen by Huckson and Hutchison of Hobart and was initially known as the George Town Station. It was constructed of local rubble with a coat of stucco to make the structure durable.The crown was built of freestone from Launceston, and the lantern room was built of timber, also from Launceston.
The keepers quarters were designed by William Moriarty and consisted of four rooms each.The quar- ters were attached to either side of the tower, the only lighthouse in Tasmania with attached quarters.The structure, 15.25 metres (50 feet) from the base to the top of the lantern, was erected by Mr Walmsley of Launceston.
The lantern was constructed at the Launceston Timber Yard, and the original lamps and reflectors were manu- factured by Mr William Hart. He supplied “six dozen lamps, including reflectors, at three shillings and sixpence each”, and burned sperm whale oil.
In 1835 a revolving shutter, rotated by a clockwork mechanism was installed and in 1838 the original reflectors and Argand lamps were replaced by a catoptric system sourced from Wilkins and Co of London
The tower was falling into disrepair, and it was necessary to rebuild it in 1888.The original convict-built stone tower was pulled down and replaced with the present double brick structure, and painted white.The new tower utilised the original revolving catoptric apparatus.

Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Williams Florence Elizabeth (17th May 1833, London – 1915, Bowral NSW)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Florence Elizabeth Williams (17th May 1833, London – 1915, Bowral NSW) Fortune In The Cup 1881
Oil on board
24.7 x 30.8 cm
Signed lower right corner ‘FEW’ Housed in the original guilt frame
Exhibition History: Fortune in the Cup was exhibited at the Second Annual Exhibition of the Art Society of NSW in 1881 at the Garden Palace, Sydney NSW. Florence exhibited under ‘Mrs. A. Williams’ (Alfred was her husband’s name),
Catalogue No. 187 | For tune In The Cup | 15 Guineas
Florence Williams was a founding member of the Ar t Society of NSW in 1880. Florence exhibited in the
first Society exhibition at the Garden Palace in 1880 with a number of works, the most notable of which was titled ‘Ophelia’. It received an extremely good review by the Bulletin newspaper (The Bulletin,Vol 4 no 40 p2). Ophelia also held the most expensive price tag of 75 pounds in the entire exhibition. For the Second Annual Art Society Exhibition Florence entered 8 works, Primrose and Violets, On the Brook, Fortune in the Cup,The Pets (a group of guinea-pigs),The Desert, In The Pantomime, Flowers and various portraits in oils.The following year the Garden Palace was engulfed by flames in the early morning of September 22, 1882.
Fortune in the Cup offers a rear glimpse at an early interior scene, most likely completed somewhere in Sydney as Florence and her husband were living in Glebe Point up to around 1889.The scene shows a woman sitting at a table looking into her teacup.The interior of the room has a lush green chase in the background along with a matching green rug and tablecloth.There is a still life painting (Presumably by Williams) in the upper right corner of the room, which is housed in a beautiful ornate frame. Joan Kerr noted ‘Florence’s paintings seem unique for Australia at the time when domestic genre paintings are almost unknown’.
Most recently Florence Williams art sold for a record $ 90,000 in 2015.The work featured a crimson Rosella set against the lush bushlands of Mount Wellington. This painting was completed whilst Florence lived in Tasmania, c1874.
(Compiled with the help of Col Fullagar of Integrity Resolutions)
Inscription on verso of artwork: ‘The For tune in the Cup’ | Fifteen Guineas| (Exhibited in The Ar t Society’s Exhibition at the Garden Palace) Painted of (details rubbed out) In 1880 or 81.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Collard Anna Sarah Rachel (1828-1904)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Anna Sarah Rachel Collard (1828-1904) Explorers on the Riverbank 1882
60 cm x 70 cm
Watercolour on paper
A rare painting by Collard. Her works often depicted scenes around her home or Carcoar and Port Macquarie.Signed lower right,A.S.R Collard 1882
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Garling Frederick (1806-1873)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Frederick Garling (1806-1873)
P & O Malta Moored outside Campbell’s Wharf Sydney1859 34 cm x 52 cm
Watercolour and pencil on whatmans paper
Inscribed on the mount in Garling’s handwriting : ‘The P. & O. S. N. Cos Steamship MALTA Capt’ Down at her moorings off Moore’s Wharf Sydney 1859
Moore’s wharf and warehouses were built on Millers Point by the wealthy merchant, Joseph Moore, and it was from his wharf that the first shipment of gold from Australia was sent to London The Steamship ‘Malta’ was under the Command of Captain Henr y Down (1820-1864), who is depicted in the scene wearing a top hat seated in the tender being rowed out to his ship.The watercolour has remained in Down’s family since it was painted in 1859. Henry Down joined P. & O. in 1847, at the age of twenty seven, as a 2nd Officer in the ‘Indus’. In 1852 he was promoted to Master and took command of the ‘Chusan’ on her voyage to Sydney The ‘Malta’ was built as a passenger paddle steamer in 1848 by Caird & Co. of Greenock. In 1858 her bow was lengthened and she was re-rigged as a three-masted barque and converted to screw propulsion by Laird’s at Birkenhead. She was now 1,942 tons, 87. 10 m long, 11. 89 broad and 8. 78 deep. The space where her paddles had been was apparently visible to the end of her days.The P. &
O. Company began its service to Australia via Singapore in 1852 with the ‘Chusan’ under the command of Henry Down.Two or three years later the service was stopped. In January 1859 it was revived by the ‘Malta’ sailing from Southampton to Sydney to open the service from there
to Mauritius and Suez.Thus this watercolour illustrates the ship on her first visit to Australia The ‘Malta’ was sold on 24 March 1876 to J. McBryde for 6,502 pounds sterling and was broken up on the river Clyde in 1882.
Provenance: By descent through the family of Captain Henry Down
Sotheby’s, Fine Australian Paintings including the Dr. John L. Raven Collection, Melbourne, 17/04/1989, Lot No. 319
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Allport Henry Curzon (1788- 1854)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Henry Curzon Allport (1788- 1854)
Parramatta River (Female Orphan School) 1846
16 cm x 24 cm
Watercolour on paper
Signed and dated in ink lower centre, H C Allport 1846
We believe that this painting depicts the Parramatta River and Arthurs Hill, with the Female Orphan School in the background. Construction of the school commenced in 1813, and was finally finished in 1818. It was said to be the largest building in colonial Sydney.
Henry Allport a professional artist and teacher of Australia’s first professional female artist Mary Morton Allport, arrived in the colony in 1838. He soon began working for the Macarthur’s at Elizabeth Farm in Parramatta. It is said that Allport received a substantial inheritance from an English relative which enabled him to purchase a property close by to Kissing Point.Through the 1840s and 50s he lived here and worked at the Australian Agricultural Company.
Many of his surviving works depict views painted on a commission basis for residents in the area of the Parramatta River.A folio of drawings in the Mitchell Library provide the names of several of his patrons to support this hypothesis.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Shaw James (1815- 1881)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
James Shaw (1815- 1881) Clanfergeal ‘Daw Park’ Adelaide 1868 43 cm x 55 cm
Oil on Canvas
Signed and dated lower left.
Clanfergeal was one of five mansions in the Edwardstown district of Adelaide.
The House was built by Captain William O’Halloran after purchasing 80 acres of land from David McLaren for 160 pounds.The Repatriation General Hospital now sits on this land in what is known as Daw Park.
William O Halloran was married to Eliza Smyth. He was appointed Justice of the Peace and in 1843 became the private secretary to Governor Gray Clerk ofThe Councils and a member of the Board of Audit. In 1852 he took over the position of Auditor General of South Australia. He retired in 1868 after 27 years of public service for the colony.

Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Ball Adam Gustavus (1821-1882)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Adam Gustavus Ball (1821-1882)
Hunters, Aroona Station, South Australia c1854 Pencil and Red Ochre on paper
35 x 25 cm
Signed with initials lower right
$35,000
This drawing was owned by John Hayward, the first Pastrolist to arrive in the Aroona Valley in 1851. Adam Ball worked in the area in the mid 1850s and drew at least one work for local another station owner George Marchant of Arkaba Station. It is very possible that this drawing was one of the first pictorial records of the original Australians living in the Aroona/Flinders Ranges region of South Australia.The men bear chest and arm scars and are wearing nose bones, most likely to be made from kangaroo bone. Interestingly, Ball has used small patches of ochre
to begin colouring the rock on which the men stand. A hint of the new life occurring in the field below is made clear by the cows grazing near the tree line.The drawing is in good condition and signed with initials on the lower right.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Campbell John (1855-1924)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
John Campbell (1855-1924)
View from Darling Point towards Point Piper 1895 Watercolour and Gouache on paper
Size: (Painted image 31.5 x49 cm
Sheet size: 39 x 56.7 cm
Signed and dated 1895 lower right
Whatmans watermark RHS
SOLD
Painted from the beach situated close to Carthona Ave on Darling Point. Carthona House is visible in the centre of the composition.The background depicts Point Piper and villas built on Wolseley Rd and Wingdal Place.
Carthona House is a neo-Gothic mansion built in 1841 by NSW’s fourth surveyor-general, SirThomas Mitchell.Its name derives from Carthon,meaning‘the murmur of waves’,and its waterfront location at Darling Point was unique for the time. Distinctive features of the house include the tall Tudor chimneys, pointed Gothic windows and a series of carved stone portrait heads, ranging from medieval kings and knights to Queen Victoria and the Duke of Wellington.The house has since been in the Oxley family for three generations, and is now a unique combination of Gothic Revival architecture and period pieces with contemporary art.
(Sydney Living Museums description 2019)
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Schramm Alexander (1813-1864)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Alexander Schramm (1813-1864)
South Australian Natives On The Tramp c1859
Chalk lithograph from two stones, printed on thick paper 29.5 x 43.4 cm
Native Encampment in South Australia c1859
29.8 cm x 42.2 cm
Chalk lithograph from two stones, on thick paper Sold as pair
A rare pair of lithographs printed in Adelaide c1859. Image size: 29.8 x 42.2 cm Sheet size: 39.5 x 53 cm. Chalk Lithograph printed in colour from two stones.
AND
Alexander Schramm (1814- 1864)
Set of four tinted lithographs
Published by Penman & Gailbraith, Adelaide 1859. Each is titled in printed text on the margin.
16 x 23.5 cm (image size) 25.5 x 31.5 cm (Sheet Size)
This rare set of lithographs are in good condition. Sold as a set of four
Civilisation vs Nature Bushing It – Morning Halt By The Way Natives on The Tramp
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Governor Davy’s proclamationview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Artist Unknown (AIE) c1860
Governor Davy’s (George Arthur) Proclamation to the Aborigines 1816
Lithograph, printed in black ink on buff laid paper. hand coloured in the 19th century. Printed c1866
Signed with printed initials A.I.E under the image
45.7 x 27.9 cm
Housed in a colonial timber frame.
Inscription verso: “To Frederick P. French Esquire Lieut-R.N. H.M.S. Miranda from A. E. Smith Old Wharf Hobar t Tasmania, 11th March 1881”
Provenance: A E Smith Old Wharf Hobar t Tasmania c1860-1880? Lieutenant Frederick P French Esquire c1881
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Davy Governor see Governor Davyview full entry
Reference:
Arthur George Governor proclamation see Governor Davy’s proclamationview full entry
Reference:
Terry Frederick Casemero (1825-1869) Birds Eye View of Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Frederick Casemero Terry (1825-1869) Birds Eye View of Sydney Harbour c1858 Lithograph printed in black ink, hand coloured Published by Allen and Wigley, Sydney
35.5 x 84 cm
This rare view of Macquarie Street and the Harbour of Port Jackson was taken from a viewpoint at the top of St James’s Church. It provides a unique view of many of the important colonial buildings in Sydney. The Empire newspaper reviewed the large print in an article dated 10th June 1858, stating that the work was “very distinct” and conveyed “some idea of the land we live in”
The work is housed in a 19th century ornate gilt frame
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Lloyd Henry Grant (1830-1904)view full entry
Reference: see Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Henry Grant Lloyd (1830-1904)
Elswick House, Leichhardt Sydney, January 1863
Watercolours on tinted paper (Front and Back view)
FrontView of the House and Pond | 19 x 27.5 cm | Signed and inscribed Elswick near Sydney H.G. Lloyd jan.1863 lower right.
Back view of the House including the extensive lawn and servant’s quarters | 19 x 27.5 cm | Signed and inscribed Elswick Near Sydney. H.G Lloyd jan 1863 lower right.
James Norton purchased Elswick a 100-acre property on the Parramatta Rd in 1834. He developed a magnificent Old world garden, and dug a significant pond into the grounds near the house that became the life of the garden. A row of cottages was also placed behind the house and used as servant’s quarters.
One of the foundations of the development of Leichhardt as a suburb was the subdivision of
the Elswick estate. It was subdivided into hundreds of blocks of land, that residential housing was developed on.
This pair of beautiful watercolours are reminiscent of the style and techniques of H.G Lloyd’s painting teacher, Conrad Martens.The works depict the front and back of Elswick House, including the significant pond that was a water source for the old-world garden.The painting depicting
the back side of the House and garden, also shows the accommodation for the workers hidden between the trees off to the right.
Both works are underdrawn with pencil and are both signed, titled and dated on the lower right. Both paintings are in good condition.
Publishing details: Vince Day Gallery, Australian History Collection, Online Exhibition, September, 2019:
Curtis Robert Emerson (1898-1996) view full entry
Reference: see JOHN NICHOLSON'S auction, UK, 2 October, lot 81
Robert Emerson Curtis (1898-1996) British/Australian. "The Bridge from Woolloomooloo", with Sydney Harbour Bridge in the distance, Hand Painted Lithograph, Signed, Inscribed and Numbered 2/50 and Dated 1932 in Pencil, 10" x 15.75", and Three others by the same hand, "Sydney from the Heights of Vaucluse", "Station & Ferry Wharf from Milson's Point", and "Milson's Point", of varying sizes, together with a Book by the artist 'Building The Bridge' including Twelve Lithographs by the artist, Four (4).
Hollingdale Richard attribview full entry
Reference: see BEARNES HAMPTON & LITTLEWOOD
auction, 15 October, 2019, lot 367: British School 19th Century [Attributed to Richard Hollingdale & Others]- A collection of topographical watercolour drawings of Tasmania, New Zealand & Brazil,:- Tasmanian titles comprise Nr. Hobart, Tollochgorum Nr. Avoca, Grants Old House, Byway St. Marys Nr. Avoca, The Red Rock St Pauls 1857 [pencil drawing], Franston Nr. Hobart, Red Rock, Nr. Hobart, Tasmania, Tasmania, Waterfall, Red Rock Avoca. New Zealand titles comprise Tongariro, Hol? Lake, Hot Springs NZ, Brazilian titles comprise Rio Harbour, Rio de Janeiro Town, various sizes 22 x 29cm and smaller. [17]
Mackennal Bertram Salomeview full entry
Reference: See Bonhams, Australia, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE., 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra. lot 11:
Bertram Mackennal (1863-1931)
Salome, c.1895
incised with signature at base: B. MACKENNAL / LONDON
bronze
height: 29.0cm (11 7/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired before 1954

EXHIBITED
Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy, London, May 1897, cat. 2053 (another example)
Bertram Mackennal, Sculpture from the Stawell Gallery, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, February 1901 (another example)
Exhibition of Bronzes by Sir Bertram Mackennal K.C.V.O, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 7 – 20 October 1926, cat. 18 (another example)
Memorial exhibition of statuettes by the Late Sir Bertram Mackennal, K.C.V.O, Fine Arts Society Gallery, Melbourne, May 1932 (another example)
Commemorative Exhibition of Works by Late Members, Winter Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 7 January – 11 March 1933 (another example)
British Sculpture 1850-1914: A Loan Exhibition of Sculpture and Medals Sponsored by the Victorian Society, Fine Art Society PLC, London, 30 September –30 October 1968 (another example)
Winter Exhibition, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 1975 (another example)
SH Ervin Memorial Exhibition, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, 18 May – 17 December 1979 (another example)
Renaissance References in Australian Art, University Gallery, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 13 August – 20 September 1985 (another example)
Bertram Mackennal, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 17 August - 4 November 2007; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 30 November 2007 - 24 February 2008 (another example)

LITERATURE
J. Washington, 'Bertram Mackennal', Renaissance References in Australian Art, University of Melbourne, 1985
Juliet Peers, 'Angles, Harlots and Nymphs: Some themes in Australian Allegorical sculpture', Art and Australia, Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 1987, p. 214
Robin Tanter, Bertram Mackennal, A Career, Cremorne, 2004, p. 159-161
Deborah Edwards, Bertram Mackennal: The Fifth Balnaves Foundation Sculpture Project, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2007, pp. 5, 115 (illus., another example)
Michael Barden, 'Sir Edgar Bertram Mackennal, KCVO (1863-1931): Australian Sculptor, Medal and Stamp Designer', Australian Journal of Philately, Melbourne, September 2008, pp. 15-18 (illus., another example)

RELATED WORKS
Other examples of this work are held in the collections of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, and the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth

The legend of Salome comes from the Gospels of Matthew (14: 3–11) and Mark (6: 17–28). Both tell of Salome, daughter of Herodias (wife of Herod Antipas), whose dance so pleased her stepfather (who was also her uncle) that he promised her whatever she desired as a reward. At the bidding of her mother, who was fuelled by a vendetta, Salome requested the head of St John the Baptist on a dish.

Bertram Mackennal's Salome statuette was created at the end of the 19th century, during a period of intense interest in this character. Many fin-de-siècle artists and writers were fascinated by the idea of the femme fatale: the smart and seductive woman capable of persuasion and emasculation. Mythical figures such as Circe and Lilith, sphinxes and sirens, as well as biblical characters like Delilah and Salome, were represented widely, and were particularly popular among pre-Raphaelite artists.

As Mackennal was sculpting Salome, an infamous play of the same name, penned by Oscar Wilde, had been in circulation since 1891. Wilde expanded on the verses from the New Testament, accentuated the dance by which Salome seduces and manipulates her lust-crazed stepfather/uncle, and brought the character of Salome to the centre of the story. It is this Salome to which Mackennal is responding: nude and elongated, and holding a long sword behind her back – a symbol of her destructive power.
Crooke Rayview full entry
Reference: See Bonhams, Australia, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE., 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra. lot 50:
Ray Crooke (1922-2015)
The Morning Catch, Fiji Island, 1969-71
signed and dated lower left: 'R Crooke 71'
titled, signed and dated verso:
oil on synthetic polymer paint on canvas on composition board, triptych
183.0 x 488.0cm (72 1/16 x 192 1/8in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Collection of Margaret Carnegie, Holbrook
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney, acquired from the above c. 1971

LITERATURE
James Gleeson, Ray Crooke, Australian Artist Editions, Collins, Sydney, 1972, unpaginated (illus.)
Suzanne Grano, North of Capricorn, The art of Ray Crooke, Perc Tucker Regional Gallery, Townsville, 1997, pp. 15-16 (illus.)

Viewed from a window or balcony, Ray Crooke's figures in Morning Catch, Fiji Island, are poised in a languid moment of exchange. This monumental panorama of island life is unique in its scale and ambition, composed across three separate panels which are divided along the same structure as a winged altarpiece. The central panel contains our assembled group, gathered around the morning's catch which is arrayed as a bounty at their feet. The wings to the left and right extend our view of the village with glimpses into the quiet shade of the houses.

Despite the compositional structure with its echoes in religious works, Crooke's work here is not iconoclastic but rather deals with the most human of experiences. Our figures are engaged in a simple moment of exchange which Crooke has infused with a melancholy which we must recognise as a type of Paradise Lost.

As noted by Suzanne Grano in her 1997 exhibition catalogue, 'Images such as The School Bell, Thursday Island, 1958, and Morning Catch, Fiji Island, 1969, may awaken in viewers a nostalgia for the joy and beauty that seems always to exist in a distant time and place. Back in the magical realm of childhood. Or perhaps away in an imagined tranquil heaven on a distant tropical island. Through the delicate light and shadow which envelop so many of Crooke's still figures, the viewer may catch a glimpse of the human potential before the Fall. We are all too aware that such states of idyllic bliss come to us rarely in most of our adult urban lives.'1

The motif of island life, of a type of Paradise, was one that proved to be of enduring inspiration for Crooke. From that first transformative experience in his 20s, Crooke notes, 'It is like a journey of discovery. I repeat myself endlessly because the variations of the vision are never-ending, and with added painting experience I approach closer to the ultimate wedding of vision and hand - the moment in time when all factors are right.'2

Merryn Schriever

1.Suzanne Grano, North of Capricorn, The art of Ray Crooke, Perc Tucker Regional Gallery, Townsville, 1997, p. 15
2. ibid, p. 16

1 

Australian Art Auction administration - Australian Art 

Tel: +61 2 8412 2222 
australianart@bonhams.com 















French Leonardview full entry
Reference: See Bonhams, Australia, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE., 22 Sep 2019, Sydney, Woollahra. lot 189:
Leonard French (1928-2017)
The Crusader, 1961
signed and dated lower left: 'FRENCH 61'
enamel on hessian on composition board
137.0 x 122.0cm (53 15/16 x 48 1/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Farmer's Blaxland Galleries, Sydney
Collection of Rudy Komon, Sydney
Collection of the late Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax, Sydney

EXHIBITED
12 Paintings on the Life of Edmund Campion, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, 1961
12 Paintings on the Life of Edmund Campion, Argus Gallery, Melbourne, 23 October - 3 November 1961, cat. 1 N.F.S.
Leonard French, Commonwealth Institute Art Gallery, Kensington, London, 21 March - 16 April 1967

LITERATURE
Vincent Buckley, Leonard French, The Campion Paintings, Grayflower Publications, Melbourne, 1962, pp. 17, 23, 41 (illus.), pl. 8
Sasha Grishin, Leonard French, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1995, pp. 30, 72, 73 (illus.)

In 1960, Leonard French exhibited five works based upon elements of The Book of Genesis. Richly coloured and patterned, the paintings cycled from Genesis through to The Wake and are now predominately held in public collections. Their production acted as a catalyst for French who later that year and into early 1961 created what was to become known as the Campion sequence. Taking their source from Evelyn Waugh's 1935 biography Edmund Campion: Scholar, priest, hero and martyr, the works are full of heraldic and dramatic power.

In his lavish 1962 monograph on the series, Vincent Buckley, notes, 'The Campion sequence presents with remarkable fullness and diversity, French's sense of what was really involved in Campion's dangerous mission to Elizabethan England; but it does so without attempting to illustrate the stages of his life conceived as a spiritual career. Its admitted starting point was Evelyn Waugh's biography of Campion, but the viewpoint and dimensions of Waugh's picture see, to have little to do with French's finished achievement. That achievement is based not on any attempt to provide a vade-mecum through Campion's life but on an attempt to express in a highly individual idiom and symbolism French's sense of representative significance which that life has. "It was the symbol I painted", he has said, "not the man". Perhaps it would be better to say that he has painted the man as a symbol, a symbol of certain forces deep-buried in the human condition. Campion appears now as a recognisably human figure adopting this or that recognisable stance, now as a heavily accented cross, now as a tower with only the most tenuous reference to the human shape, now as a fish in one or other posture: or torment, dying or metamorphosis. But, however obvious this conversion of human gesture and stance into non-human terms, one feels throughout that French has preserved in his symbols the reference to human destiny which plainly provided the motive-power for the paintings themselves; they act in the paintings as highly formalised representations not merely of things but also of human deeds and postures.'

Now considered to be amongst French's most powerful and transformative works, the exhibitions of the Campion sequence, along with the publication of Buckley's book and reviews in both Art and Australia and Meanjin, elevated French to a position of national regard. Works from the Campion sequence were acquired by significant private collectors including Dr Harold Hattan, Harold Holt, Mr Douglas Carnegie and the Baillieu Collection as well as public collections including the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Mertz Collection in Texas. The Crusader was acquired at that time by Sir Warwick Fairfax and has remained in the family collection until now.

Merryn Schriever

1 

Australian Art Auction administration - Australian Art 

Tel: +61 2 8412 2222 
australianart@bonhams.com 













Brennan Angelaview full entry
Reference: see Angela Brennan.  Australian Art Collector.  Apr-June. 2004
Publishing details: Australian Art Collector.  Apr-June. 2004
Christmann Gunterview full entry
Reference: see Gunter Christmann.  Australian Art Collector.  July-Sept. 2004

Stuart Guyview full entry
Reference: see Guy Stuart.  Australian Art Collector.  July-Sept. 2004

Adsett Peterview full entry
Reference: see Peter Adsett: agonistic formalism.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar. 2004
Sublime in Nature Theview full entry
Reference: The sublime in nature and Botany Bay, in Martin, The Australian Sketchbook, James Tegg, Sydney, 1838, pp.3-12, 45-58 / James Martin
Publishing details: Victoria : Deakin University, 1983 
4-12, 46-58 p
Ref: 1009
Tegg James publisherview full entry
Reference: The sublime in nature and Botany Bay, in Martin, The Australian Sketchbook, James Tegg, Sydney, 1838, pp.3-12, 45-58 / James Martin
Publishing details: Victoria : Deakin University, 1983 
4-12, 46-58 p
Martin Jamesview full entry
Reference: The sublime in nature and Botany Bay, in Martin, The Australian Sketchbook, James Tegg, Sydney, 1838, pp.3-12, 45-58 / James Martin
Publishing details: Victoria : Deakin University, 1983 
4-12, 46-58 p
Tjapanangka Tjumpo view full entry
Reference: see Tjumpo Tjapanangka.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar 06. 2006
McHaffie Rob view full entry
Reference: see Rob McHaffie.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar 06. 2006
Napanangka Makinti view full entry
Reference: see Makinti Napanangka.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar 06. 2006
Barra Barra Djambu ('Sambo') view full entry
Reference: see Djambu ('Sambo') Barra Barra.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar 06. 2006
Bezor Annetteview full entry
Reference: see Annette Bezor.  Australian Art Collector.  Jan-Mar 06. 2006

Wells William Page Atkinson (1872-1923) view full entry
Reference: see Lawrences Auctioneers of Crewkerne, Somerset, UK, 11 October, 2019, lot 2160:
WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
A FARM, POSSIBLY ON THE ISLE OF MAN
Oil on canvas laid on board
56.5 x 70cm.
++ Some craquelure; good impasto
Lots 2160 to 2167 are by William Page Atkinson Wells and have been consigned for sale by a descendant of the artist.
The artist's father, Andrew Wells, was an interior decorator and housepainter whose commissions included decorating work for the Duke of Northumberland. He married Margaret (nee Atkinson) in 1870 and she bore him two sons. William, the elder, was born in Glasgow in July 1871 and the family moved to Australia in 1885 in search of steadier employment. Young William became a member of the New South Wales Arts Society in Sydney and he impressed his parents sufficiently for them to send their adolescent boy back to London to study at the Slade (Alphonse Legros was one of his teachers) and at the Atelier Julien in Paris. Wells then settled in Glasgow but, despite being in a culturally energetic city, it took some effort to bring his work took to the public's attention and he was a theatrical scene painter for seven years. He married his first cousin, Helen Gordon Reid (1879-1961) in 1897 and they began a restless and peripatetic marriage, moving to three addresses in Lancashire before a ruinous flood destroyed much of Wells's work. He then moved with his wife and two sons to the Isle of Man and lived in Port Erin, Port St Mary and Colby before relocating once again to Devon. Homes were found in Teignmouth and Shaldon, then Topsham before the family settled at last in Appledore in 1922. An ungregarious painter, Wells prospered nonetheless and travelled a lot, owning many tenanted properties and managing to educate his sons well. He was a heavily built chainsmoker and died of pneumonia in May 1923 but rudimentary health facilities in Appledore might have also contributed to his early demise at the age of just 51. James Lewis Caw, writing in `Scottish Painters, Past and Present 1620-1908`, praised Wells for his `skilfully painted landscapes, marked by much quiet sentiment and fine feeling`. He favoured plein air painting but the curiously impacted surface effects he achieved were sometimes the result of his using a challenging blend of ink, charcoal, soot, watercolour and pumice stone in his oils.

The other lots:

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
FIGURES AND BOATS ON A BEACH
Signed, oil on board
26 x 34.5cm.
++ Distinctive heavy brushwork and impasto; needs a very light clean

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
BOATS IN AN ESTUARY
Signed and indistinctly dated, oil on canvas
24.5 x 34cm.

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
TWO FIGURES AT THE EDGE OF A FIELD NEAR THE EXE, TOPSHAM
Signed, oil on canvas
30 x 39.5cm.

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
FEEDING THE POULTRY
Oil on canvas laid on board
19.5 x 29cm.
*The boy is believed to be the artist's son William, known as Bennie (b.1910)
++ Some craquelure; good impasto

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
HORSE AND CART IN A FARM YARD
Watercolour, heightened with scratching out
24 x 24cm.;
with a watercolour of a figure trending sheep at twilight, 15 x 24.5cm; a small landscape study, initialled and dated, 6 x 8.5cm; and three small watercolours by other minor hands, one unframed. (6)

WILLIAM PAGE ATKINSON WELLS (1872-1923)
ETCHINGS: THE ARTIST'S WIFE; STREET IN APPLEDORE; THE SEAWEED CART; THE SMELT AT PORT ST. MARY; BOAT AT APPLEDORE; KENTRAUGH, ISLE OF MAN; COTTAGES
Eight etchings, printed in sepia ink, on wove, restrikes, framed as six
The largest 14.5 x 22.5cm; the smallest 11.5 x 8cm. (6 frames)
* Etching was a practice that Wells only ever pursued for `just playing around - fun` and these subjects were printed in 1972 by Professor Rees at the Bournemouth College of Art. Wells had been taught etching by Alphonse Legros at the Slade. It is thought that he only produced eleven plates and his etchings are heretofore unknown on the commercial market.






Gordon-Frazer Charles Eview full entry
Reference: see Lawrences, Pictures, Furniture, Clocks & Rugs, 11th October 2019 | 10:00AM | Crewkerne Salerooms, Lot 2084

CHARLES E. GORDON-FRAZER (British/Australian, 1863-1899) TREE DWELLERS OF NEW GUINEA, VILLAGE OF VERBURI Signed, oil on canvas 90 x 59.5cm.
Estimate: £700 - £1000
Heery Garyview full entry
Reference: Gary Heery - Selected Works 1976-2013. Foreword by Edmund Capon.
Publishing details: Syd. Gary Heery. n.d. (2013?) Large folio. Or.cl. 336pp. Profusely illustrated with many of Heery’s colour and black & white photographs. 1st ed. Edition of 1,000 numbered copies signed by the photographer.
Ref: 1000
Seidler Harryview full entry
Reference: HARRY SEIDLER: SELECTED & CURRENT WORKS. Records Seidler’s unique & vital contribution to 20th Century architecture, art & design. The Master Architect Series III.
Publishing details: Melb. Images Publ/Craftsman House. 1997. 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 256pp. Profusely illustrated in colour. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Ritchie-Harrison Eleanor (1854-1895) view full entry
Reference: see Joels auction Women Artists sale LJ8316, Wednesday 9 October, 2019.
Lot 65A
ELEANOR RITCHIE-HARRISON (1854-1895)
A Winter Morning 1888
oil on canvas
signed and dated lower left: E. Ritchie-Harrison / 1888
88 x 159cm

PROVENANCE:
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, February 2006
Private collection, Melbourne


OTHER NOTES:
Although born into a pioneering Victorian Western District family, Eleanor spent her early childhood in Europe and by 1876 had decided on a career as an artist.
While sketching in the countryside near Paris, she met the American plein-airist (Lowell) Birge Harrison. They were married not long afterwards. The couple travelled, pursuing their artistic desires. In 1887 the Harrisons settled for eighteen months in Etaples, presumably where this painting was created.
Estimate $3,000-5,000
Rickards Jocelyn (1924-2005) view full entry
Reference: see Joels auction Women Artists sale LJ8316, Wednesday 9 October, 2019.
Lot 89
JOCELYN RICKARDS (1924-2005)
Theatre Design
pencil, watercolour, and gouache on paper
signed lower right: Jocelyn Rickards
41 x 31cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
"Jocelyn Rickards was an extraordinary woman. Coming from a conservative family, she talked her way out of Ascham and into the Darlinghurst Art School ('East Sydney Tech') at the age of 14. She stayed on for an extra year to hone her skills and became part of an infamous & vital salon called The Merioola Group (named after the house they all shared in Woollahra). She was a leading light in what Robert Hughes referred to as 'The Sydney Charm School' of artists who exhibited at the David Jones and Macquarie Galleries in the late 1940s.
Moving to the UK in 1949, Jocelyn soon found gloomy post-war London in the midst of Britain's most disruptive theatre movement since Shakespeare – the 'Angry Young Men' social realists. Helping out her Merioola colleague Loudon Sainthill with sketches for an unproduced film, Jocelyn landed work in various West End stage productions and succeeded brilliantly in learning on the job and creating a new profession for herself as a costume designer."
(Bob Hill)
Estimate $400-600

Hinder Margelview full entry
Reference: see see Joels auction Women Artists sale LJ8316, Wednesday 9 October, 2019.
Lot 124A
MARGEL HINDER (1906-1995)
Model for Interlock 1973-1979
steel and timber sculpture
37 x 47 x 46 cm

PROVENANCE:
Gift of the artist to her daughter Mrs Enid Hawkins, Sydney
Sotheby's, Sydney, 15 April 2014, lot 254
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
During summer school in American in 1930, Margel met her future husband Frank Hinder which began a partnership of mutual artistic respect and love.
In the 1940s she experimented with abstract forms and her later works included "revolving sculptures through whose interlocked forms spaces changed and changing shadows were cast. Nature, such as spider webs, often inspired her work".

Margel Hinder and her sculpture have been neglected in standard accounts of Australian art history, despite the excellence of her work. Caught up in a parochial rejection of international modernism as a threat to national identity, that effectively extended over many decades, in the 20th century, she and fellow artists Frank Hinder, Grace Crowley, Rah Fizelle and Ralph Balson because casualties of the earlier, political 'culture wars'. (Ian Cornford)
Estimate $600-800

Walwicz Aniaview full entry
Reference: see see see Joels auction Women Artists sale LJ8316, Wednesday 9 October, 2019.
Lot 132
ANIA WALWICZ (Polish/Australian, born 1951)
The Watcher 1973
etching ed. 2/4
signed and dated lower right: Ania Walwicz 73
editioned lower left
titled lower centre
10 x 10cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
Ania Walwicz was born in Poland in 1951 and arrived in Australia in 1963. A poet and visual artist, her works regularly draw on the experiences of migrants.

'You big ugly. You too empty. You desert with your nothing nothing nothing. You scorched suntanned. Old too quickly. Acres of suburbs watching the telly. You bore me." (The Artist)
Estimate $200-300

Jolliffe Ericview full entry
Reference: see Antipodean Maps, Prints, Books, ELIST 39 ~ AFRICAN AMERICAN; NEW YORK; MINING; PHOTOGRAPHY; AUSTRALIA, 2019:
Jolliffe, Eric.
SALTBUSH BILL. CARTOON FUN ON THE FARM. 20 NUMBERS INCLUDING THE FIRST NUMBER.
Woolloomooloo: Sungravure Ltd., c 1940s. Wraps. Twenty numbers of the wonderfully illustrated cartoons on "bushies" (white settlers of the outback), now politically incorrect, by Eric Jolliffe (1907 - 2001), the British born painter and cartoonist who emigrated to Perth in 1911.

Jolliffe became acquainted with bushies and indigenous Australians when we worked as a camouflage artist with the R.A.A.F. during W.W.II in the Northern Territory. He was admired by both Aborigines and bushies; Jolliffe used the harsh circumstances of bush life to make his visual jokes and observations. Many of the cartoons need no captions.

The run includes the following numbers: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 32, 35, 36, and 42.

Oblong 8vo, each issue approximately 47 pp, staplebound. In the original color illustrated wrappers. Five issues chipped and ruffled at spines; Number 2 loose in wrappers, wrappers chipped with some old sticky tape repairs on rear wrapper. Trove 3930921 at 7 libraries. Good condition. Item #25583
Ref: 1000
Jolliffe Ericview full entry
Reference: see Antipodean Maps, Prints, Books, ELIST 39 ~ AFRICAN AMERICAN; NEW YORK; MINING; PHOTOGRAPHY; AUSTRALIA, 2019:
Jolliffe, Eric.
WITCHETTY'S TRIBE. ABORIGINAL CARTOON FUN. 20 NUMBERS INCLUDING THE FIRST NUMBER, SPELLED "WICHETTY'S TRIBE"
Sydney: Sungravure Ltd., Late 1940s - 1950s. Wraps. Nineteen numbers of the wonderfully illustrated cartoons on Aborigines, now politically incorrect, by Eric Jolliffe (1907 - 2001), the British born painter and cartoonist who emigrated to Perth in 1911.

Jolliffe became acquainted with indigenous Australians in the Kimberley and Arnhem Land when we worked as a camouflage artist with the R.A.A.F. during W.W.II. He was admired by both Aborigines and later Australians; Jolliffe used the jarring incongruity of Aborigines' lives seen from a western perspective to make his visual jokes and observations. Many of the cartoons need no captions.

The run includes the following numbers: 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 28, 29, 30 (2 copies), 31, 33, and 35.

Oblong 8vo, each issue approximately 47 pp, staplebound. In the original color illustrated wrappers. Six issues chipped and ruffled at spines. We found no record of the first number on Trove (Trove 57928408 locates Number 2 at the Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islander Studies). Good condition. Item #25580
Ref: 1000
Audette Yvonne b1930)view full entry
Reference: see Cheffins auction UK, 10 Oct 2019: lot 517, Yvonne Audett (Australian, b.1930) Caligraphic Writing signed and dated 'Y. Audett 62' (lower right) mixed media 27 x 21.50cm (11 x 8in)
Other Notes: Yvonne Audette has made an important contribution to Australian Modernism. After studying at the Julian Ashton School, she moved to the USA to study at the New York School of Design from 1950. It was here that she was introduced to the work of Abstract Expressionists such as Mark Rothko, Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline. The exposure to this work pushed her in her abstraction and, like de Kooning, a vague narrative can still be seen in her work. After her studies in New York, Audette moved to Florence and then Milan. Having set up a studio and held successful exhibitions in both cities, she finally moved back to Australia in 1966.
Allport Lilyview full entry
Reference: see Miss Lily : a portrait of the artist Curzona Allport by Marian Jameson. [’"Lily Allport, christened Curzona Frances Louise, was a strong woman who lived between two worlds - the old and the new. Born in the nineteenth century to a prominent Hobart family of lawyers, Lily refused to take the expected path of marriage and children. Described by her brother-in-law as 'impudent and headstrong', Lily was determined to become a professional artist. Her drive to follow her own path took her to London and success in the Royal Academy of Arts, and a satisfying life at the centre of the nineteenth-century artistic world. And then in the 1930s, at an age when she might be expected to ease up, she returned to Hobart and set up a printmaking studio, creating a late flowering of works in an entirely different medium."--Back cover.

Notes "This book was published with the general support of the Allport Bequest and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society Hobart." NLA. Includes bibliography (pages 259-261) and index.’]

Publishing details: Hobart, TAS : Fullers Publishing, 2018, 270 pages : colour illustrations, facsimiles, 1 genealogical table, portraits ; 29 cm. 
Eaton Henry Greenview full entry
Reference: Henry Green Eaton produced ;ithograph of Liverpool Street Hobart Town 1844, printed by T Nluett, Hobart
Bluett Tview full entry
Reference: see Henry Green Eaton produced ;ithograph of Liverpool Street Hobart Town 1844, printed by T Bluett, Hobart
Frith Frederickview full entry
Reference: See Deutscher & Hackett auction 4 May, 2016, lot 25

ATTRIBUTED TO CONWAY HART
(1814 – 1864)
A PAIR OF PORTRAITS OF SAMUEL AND ROSETTA MOSES WITH CHILDREN, HOBART TOWN, c.1855-1856
oil on canvas
165.0 x 124.5 cm each
ESTIMATE: 
$150,000 – 200,000 (2)

PROVENANCE
Commissioned by Samuel Moses, Hobart Town, c.1855 – 56
Samuel and Rebecca Moses, ‘Derwentwater’ then ‘Boa Vista’, Hobart Town
Thence by descent
Alice Charlotte (nee Moses) and Michael Simons, United Kingdom
Thence by descent
Dr. Lance M. J. Kramer, Exeter, United Kingdom, grandson of the above
Thence by descent
Michael Walford, Baughurst, Hampshire, United Kingdom, inherited from the above c.1997, grandson of Mr and Mrs Howard Joseph Moses
The estate of Michael Walford, Baughurst, Hampshire, United Kingdom, 2016
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury auction, Berkshire, United Kingdom, 23 February 2016
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above
EXHIBITED
Conway Hart Portrait Gallery, Liverpool Street, Hobart Town, August – September 1856
CATALOGUE TEXT
The thirteen children of Samuel and Rosetta Moses
Clara, b. 1837, d. 1909
Alfred Samuel, b. 1839, d. 1872
Harriette Rachel, b. c.1840, d. 1853
Gertrude, b. 1842
Louis, b. 1843
Edward John, b.1846, d. 1915
Unknown daughter, b. 1847
Alice Charlotte, b. 1847, d. 1920
Ernest Leopold, b. 1848, d. 1920
Henry, b. 1850, d. 1883
Lawrence Hyam, b. 1852
Lionel David, b. 1854, d. 1923
Howard Joseph Samuel, b. 1855, d. 1920
The recent discovery of this important pair of colonial paintings, commissioned in Hobart Town in the mid 1850s, presents a rare example of descending family provenance over 160 years from the sitters, Samuel and Rosetta Moses, to the recent Estate of Michael Walford, their great-grandson.
These large scale and ambitious family portraits are rare visual records of the Moses family, eminent residents of Hobart Town during a significant period of colonial development.
The paintings present various layers of historical significance. Samuel Moses was an active and influential member of the small Jewish community in Van Diemen’s Land and contributed to the building of one of Australia’s first synagogues. His commercial interests, alongside a growing shipping fleet, embraced a wide range of importing, exporting and merchant activities. The Moses family appears to have been at the forefront of social and community activities in Hobart Town throughout most of the 1840s and 50s. Samuel Moses was a member of The Royal Society of Van Diemen’s Land and the first Jewish Justice of the Peace in Australia and New Zealand.
The addition of these two significant paintings to the recorded works attributed to Conway Hart, expands our knowledge of the artist, a prominent but lesser known colonial portrait painter working in London, Melbourne, Hobart Town and Calcutta. The circumstances surrounding the portraits’ commissions are controversial following a civil law suit brought against Samuel Moses by the artist Frederick Frith, with Conway Hart as a reluctant witness.
The attribution to Conway Hart rather than Frederick Frith is based on our knowledge of a second portrait commission of ‘Mr. And Mrs. Moses and Family’ from Conway Hart in 1855–56 following the legal dispute over the Frith portraits. The description of the Frith portraits in court identify different numbers of children accompanying each parent in each painting. Stylistically the paintings are typical of Conway Hart with the treatment of Rosetta Moses and her lace shawl closely comparable with the artist’s Portrait of Elizabeth Selab Miller, Hobart, c. 1855, M.J.M. Carter AO Collection, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. The larger scale of the paintings, with joined canvas, is also typical of Conway Hart, whose life size portrait of Richard Dry, Esquire, Late Speaker of the Legislative Council, Hobart 1855, collection of the Parliament of Tasmania, is amongst the largest portrait paintings from the period.
The Pair of Portraits of Samuel and Rosetta Moses with Children, c.1855–56, have previously been dated to 1855 by Michael Walford (1924–2015), the great-grandson of Samuel and Rosetta. The identity of the children in each painting was also provided by Michael Walford in 1997, but may not be entirely correct. Assuming the date of 1855 and consistent with Michael Walford’s identification, two of the children accompanying Samuel Moses (age 48) would appear to be Clara (age 18) and Ernest (age 7); three of the children accompanying Rosetta Moses (age 35) would appear to be Alice (age 8), Louis (age 12) and Edward (age 9).
 
THE SAMUEL MOSES FAMILY IN VAN DIEMEN’S LAND
Samuel Jacob Moses (1807 – 1873) and his wife Rosetta Blanche Moses (1820-1901) were married in London in 1836 at the Great Synagogue.1 They arrived in Sydney from London at the beginning of November 1840, on the barque James Laing which had left Bristol on 24 June.2 Their second daughter, Harriette, was born five weeks later, on 8 December 1840. They stayed in Sydney for two months before sailing to Hobart on 8 February 1841, with their 'three children' on the brigantine Piscator, arriving on 17 February 1841.3
Samuel became a partner with Louis Nathan in the merchant firm, Nathan and Moses. Nathan had started business in his own name sometime before April 1841. He was listed as a receiver of imports for the first time in October that year, when he took delivery of '12 bags spices' at Hobart wharf. Samuel's youngest brother Moses Moss also arrived in Van Diemens Land in 1841. (Three Moses brothers changed their surname to Moss.) He went into business in Launceston with Louis's brother Arthur Isaac Nathan, as 'Moss & Nathan' shipping agents and import-exporters.

The first stores of Nathan and Moses at corner of Liverpool and Murray Streets, Hobart Town 1844. Hand coloured lithograph by Henry Green Eaton. Printed by T. Bluett, Hobart. (National Library of Australia)
Rosetta's brother Hyam Leopold Moses officially joined Louis and Samuel as a partner of a newly named firm, Nathan, Moses, and Company, in January 1847, from his family's London home.4 He was married at the Great Synagogue in April, and arrived in Hobart with his wife later that year. Nathan, Moses, and Co. were ship-owners and shipping agents, as well as retail and wholesale traders in a wide variety of goods. They exported wool to Britain, and shipped countless necessary products to the new colonies of New Zealand, Victoria, and South Australia. In 1844, Louis Nathan was reported as the new 'owner of two fine vessels' to be based in the Port of Launceston. The first was being sent to 'Ammon' (Jordan) for 'a cargo of sandalwood' and the other, 'a new brig' built at Battery Point, was sailing to Hong Kong.5 The firm bought and sold whalebone, whale oil, and fish oil, and owned at least four whaling brigs as well as several schooners and barques.

The Hobart Synagogue, an Egyptian revival building constructed in 1845 and the oldest synagogue building in Australia.
Louis Nathan and Samuel Moses were among the founders of Hobart Synagogue, one of the first synagogues in Australasia, which was built in an Egyptian Revival style and opened in 1845. Nathan was the first 'President of the Congregation', elected shortly after arriving in the colony, and serving in that office for ten years.6 The deed for the synagogue land was granted to 'Samuel and David Moses and Isaac Solomon', and leading subscribers to the synagogue building fund included Louis Nathan, Samuel Moses, and Rosetta's father Henry Moses of London.7 Samuel's brother Moses Moss was a founder of the Launceston Synagogue, which was also built in 1845. Samuel was the first, and for a long time, the only Jew in Australia or New Zealand authorised to perform the Mitzvah, and he travelled extensively for these duties.
Louis Nathan and his wife Harriette left Van Diemen's Land for England in February 1848. He remained a partner in Nathan, Moses, and Co., establishing 'a London Agency' for the firm and offering to 'select goods on order' for Hobart customers.8 He was succeeded as 'President of the Congregation' by Samuel Moses.
Samuel, his son Alfred Moses, and Hyam Leopold Moses were members of The Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land. This was the first Royal Society outside London, established in 1843 for 'the advance of Science and the progress of the Colony' under the official patronage of Queen Victoria. The gardens, plant collections, library, and art and artefact collections acquired by the society were the genesis of the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens and the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery. Many of these items were donated by the Society's members.9 In 1849, immediately after his return to England, Louis Nathan shipped 'one case of choice plants' to the society, only a few of which, unfortunately, 'survived the voyage'. Among other items, Samuel donated an outrigger canoe 'picked up at sea, about 200 miles from land' by one of his ships in a rescue of three Pacific islander fishermen 'blown off in a gale'. Samuel and Hyam were also early donors to the Hobart Library, appointed Life Members along with a small, select group that included the Governor and two Bishops.10
Samuel Moses was the first Jewish Justice of the Peace in Australia and New Zealand. He presided over hearings at the 'Police Office' in Hobart, sometimes with a Police Magistrate, and also at Supreme Court hearings, where he presided with a Judge. Many of those charged with offences were convicts or ex-convicts, and the most common crimes were petty theft, drunkenness, and absconding from supervision. But other defendants, plaintiffs, and witnesses in court proceedings came from all sectors of colonial society. There were frequent hearings about financial contracts and agreements, which Samuel was well-placed to adjudicate. As a result of these religious, judicial, and commercial responsibilities, Moses became one of Hobart's best known community leaders.
In 1854, a large number of Australians contributed to a fund 'in Aid of the Jews in Jerusalem'. A published list of 'subscriptions' in Hobart was headed by the Governor, His Excellency Sir W. T. Denison' who gave five guineas, followed by the Anglican 'Lord Bishop of Tasmania' who gave five pounds. Samuel Moses and Rosetta Moses each gave 25 pounds. 'Miss Clara Moses', age 17, and 'Master Louis Moses', age 11, each gave one guinea.11
Samuel and Rosetta took Clara and three-month-old baby Lionel to Melbourne in 1854 on a brand new vessel, the 600 ton steamship William Denny, which was on the way to its owners' home port in Sydney.12 The ship had an unexpectedly short span of service, being stranded and then wrecked in a storm off New Zealand in 1858. Nathan, Moses and Company, like other ship-owners, frequently encountered problems such as missing crew or shipping contract disputes, and tragedies including the wreck of the barque Lady Denison in 1850. Built at Port Arthur with convict labour by the colonial government in 1847, the Nathan, Moses & Co. ship was noted for its speed on regular return voyages between Hobart and Port Adelaide. It sank off the north-west coast of Tasmania with 16 passengers, 12 crew members, 11 convicts, and three prison guards.
Samuel and Rosetta's first residence was on Murray Street in the centre of Hobart. They moved twice in the 1850s, first to Derwentwater and then to Boa Vista, both mansions in the city's outer environs. While the family was at Derwentwater, Samuel commissioned portraits from the artist Frederick Frith. Frith had worked as a portrait painter in Britain and Melbourne before setting up 'a painting room' in Hobart. Samuel asked for a portrait of himself, and then one of 'Mrs. Moses and three children', and, after these were delivered, he ordered one 'of the whole of his family'.13 About a dozen sittings took place at Derwentwater, along with other sittings at Frith's studio. Samuel and 'Mrs. Moses … expressed themselves pleased' with the paintings, which were framed by Frith, and hung by Mrs. Moses in 'the front parlour'. Samuel Moses, however, thought that the fees charged were higher than warranted by the quality of the paintings, and although Frith did some requested 'alterations', Moses still refused to pay him more than £50. Frith sued Moses for the balance, and the case was heard at the Supreme Court in Hobart in June 1855, with artists called as witnesses for both parties. Thomas Hardman told the judge that the portraits were 'skilful paintings' and Walter Dickinson said they were all 'very good'.

Derwentwater on Sandy Bay, Hobart, the residence of the Samuel Moses Family from 1853 to 1856, with Mt. Wellington in background. Photograph by James Backhouse Water, 1881 (detail). (University of Tasmania)
Tasmanian Daily News reported that one artist was a reluctant witness. 'Mr Conway Hart was then called; but before his examination, he complained of being subpoened, as it placed him in a very disagreeable position, in having to give testimony which might affect a brother artist.'
Examined by the Attorney-General: (he said) I am a portrait painter. Have had 28 years experience. My opinion of the pictures is that they are works of art, but were I to see them anywhere I should say that the man who did them had little or no education. The drawing is bad. There is very little knowledge of composition, chiaro obscuro or colour. The three pictures are much the same. It is difficult to fix the value of the pictures That depends upon the estimation of the parties concerned.
The jurors deliberated for an hour and although they 'decided for the Plaintiff', Moses was only ordered to pay 'damages' of '£4 10s for the frames', in addition to the £50 he had already 'paid into court' for the paintings.
Several months later, The Courier newspaper gave a descriptive and laudatory account of portraits by Conway Hart displayed in his Hobart studio. The most impressive was a very large painting, 'nine feet by six', commissioned by the Legislative Council of its ex-Speaker Richard Dry. There was also portraits of 'ladies who have appreciated Mr. Hart's works and condescended to sit', including Mrs. Allport.14
… It is the production of works of this character to grace the walls of our public institutions which will raise the art-genius of the colony and spread the elements of excellence among us.15
The name of the colony was changed from Van Diemen's Land to Tasmania on 1 January 1856. At about that time or shortly before, Samuel Moses commissioned a new set of portraits – from Conway Hart. The resulting paintings were noted on 1 September 1856, when the Tasmanian Daily News urged 'Lovers of the Fine Arts' to visit 'the Portrait Gallery of Mr. Conway Hart, M. A., in Liverpool Street'.
… Amongst the number of portraits which have been taken with admirable fidelity by this accomplished artist may be noticed Captain and Miss Fenton, Miss Smith, Mrs. McLachlan, Mrs. Stevenson, Mr. and Mrs. Moses and family, Mr. and Mrs. Kissock, and others who rank among the Tasmanian elite. The whole are executed in such manner as to deserve the highest encomium, and cannot fail to make a great impression upon the beholders. In point of expression, beauty, and touch, the portraits issuing from this studio excel anything witnessed before in this colony.
The most important social occasions in Hobart were balls hosted by the Governor. In May 1844, a Launceston newspaper reported that Hobart was 'enlivened by the preparations now in progress for the ball at Government House, on the approaching Queen's birth-day'.
… Messrs. Nathan, Moses and Co.'s splendid showrooms are resorted to by our lovely belles, for the purpose of selecting such articles of taste, elegance, and fashion, with which the well-stored Magazin des Modes of that enterprising firm so copiously abounds.16
Louis Nathan had attended the previous year's 'fancy dress' Regatta Ball dressed as Ivanhoe, with nearly 600 other guests, who 'presented a galaxy of beauty and splendour'. An awestruck journalist described the costumes: there were 'nympths, nuns, orange girls, broom girls, savoyards, Tyrolese, highlanders, students, barristers, huntsmen, soldiers, sailors, priests, monks, knights, courtiers, &c., &c'.
Samuel's daughter Clara, age 18, attended a 'Grand Fancy Dress Ball' with her father in September 1855 – the year of the Conway Hart portraits. This important event was held at the commodious New Wharf and must have been an introduction to society for the colony's young ladies, as it was organised 'under the auspices of an influential committee of gentlemen', and the guest list included an unusually high proportion of unmarried women. Samuel and Clara's costumes were listed as Zitella and Dr. Riccobocca, two Italian fictional characters. Music was provided by the Chamber Band of the 99th. Regiment and according to Colonial Times, it was a 'gay and festive scene'. The costumes were 'of every variety … no expense had evidently been spared by the wearers'. They included 'Mr. Allport, Mustapha Ali Khan and his Slave. … Mr. Morton Allport, Lambro from the Greek Islands. … Mr. Curzon Allport, the Mandarin – Young Hyson'.17
At a Fancy Dress Ball two years later in October 1857, the costumes worn by Samuel, Rosetta, and Clara Moses were among those which 'attracted more than the usual observation'.
As a group Mr. Mrs and Miss Moses were undoubtedly the most complete. Mr. Moses in the character of Longinus, fully realized our conception of the great statesman and the great critic; Mrs Moses's costume as Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra, the City of the Desert, harmonizing so fully with her personal appearance, commanded universal admiration. Arrayed in the regal diadem and ermined robes of the period, she "looked and walked the Queen," and more than surpassed our imaginative ideas of Eastern beauty and Oriental magnificence. Miss Moses as the attendant on the eastern Queen was gracefully and not too gorgeously attired. Mrs. Morton Allport as Zuleika was, to all intents, the exquisite embodiment of the fair Greek maiden, as portrayed by Byron in his "Bride of Abydos."…’
Samuel and Rosetta's eldest son Alfred Samuel Moses, age 18, was at this Spring ball but he did not participate in the 'Eastern' pageant. He chose to be emphatically different, costumed as 'Joseph 11. of Austria whilst Archduke'.18
Samuel Moses returned to England with his family in 1859. Alfred remained in Australia. A Testimonial was presented to Samuel at Boa Vista in December 1858, when an 'Address' was read on behalf of 'the Members of the Hebrew Congregation' by Phineas Moss, who was Honourary Secretary of Hobart Synagogue.19 He expressed the community's 'regret at the approaching separation of so sincere and long-tried a friend'.

'Boa Visat, the seat of Samuel Moses, Esq., J.P.' Hobart. The property was built for Captain Scott of the Royal Navy, and owned by the Moses Family from 1856 until after the death of Samuel's wife Rosetta Moses in 1901. Drawing by an unknown colonial artist. From The Experience Of Forty Years In Tasmania by Hugh M. Hull. Published in 1859 by Orger & Meryon, London. J.Walch and Sons, Hobart and Launceston, and WM. Fletcher, Hobart. (National Library of Australia).
… Whilst respectfully parting with you now, they earnestly hope that not many months may elapse ere they shall have the gratification of again meeting you in this their adopted country.
In his response, Samuel said that it had been his privilege and honour to preside over the Congregation 'for a period of eleven years and upwards'.
The Moses family retained the Boa Vista property until 1902. Samuel and Rosetta Moses did not return to Australia. Two of Samuel's brothers, Laurence and David Moss, had gone to Montreal, Canada, at about the same time that he and youngest brother Moses Moss had gone to Australia, and they also moved home permanently to England with some of their children in the 1860s.20
Samuel Moses died in London in 1873, aged 66, and was the first person buried at the New Willesden Jewish Cemetery. Rosetta survived him by nearly 30 years, and is buried in the adjoining grave. Samuel's inscription reads: 'Sacred to the memory of Samuel Moses J.P. of York Terrace Regent's Park and Boa Vista, Tasmania'.21
Conway Hart returned to live in Victoria with his wife and children in April 1857.22 He advertised in The Argus in 1860 as 'Mr. Conway Hart, Artist and Photographist, 60 Elizabeth-street, opposite Age office'.23 His painting and photography work must have been considerable, as his newly built home was a 'genteel residence in a fashionable locality'. He first offered Rochester Villa and Grounds, Studley Park, for sale in 1858, announcing that he was 'removing to the Interior', and then in 1861 put it up for auction.
Hart loaned paintings to the Melbourne Ladies Benevolent Society in May 1861 for their fundraising 'Exhibition of Art Treasures', and must have left Australia with his family sometime later that year.
Conway Hart then lived in India, with several surviving photographic portraits as a record of his work there. In June 1864, a family notice was placed in The Argus.
Hart.- On the 2nd. March, at Calcutta, after a few hours' illness, of cholera, Conway Hart, Esq., artist, late of Melbourne, aged forty-eight years.
1. Birth and death dates confirmed where possible by published family notices, and by gravestone inscriptions.
2. 'Ship News,' Colonial Times, November 17, 1840, reprinted from Sydney Herald, November 2
3. 'Ship News,' Colonial Times, February 23, 1841. A 'Mr. and Mrs. Moses and three children' arrived in Hobart on February 17, 1841. Exact dates cannot always be confirmed because newspaper notices of shipping 'Arrivals' and 'Departs' usually listed passenger names without initials. There were, in addition, two other merchant families named Moses in Hobart. These were the families of John Moses and David Moses, who appear to have been unrelated to each other, and were not described in news articles or family notices as relations of Samuel Moses or Rosetta Moses. They also do not appear in British genealogical records as family members. (In regard to other types of newspaper notices, there were several convicts named Moses, including one Samuel Moses.)
4. 'Notice,' The Courier, January 9, 1847
5. 'Miscellaneous,' The Launceston Examiner, October 23, 1844
6. 'Testimonial to Louis Nathan Esq.,' Hobarton Guardian, February 23, 1848.
7. 'Internal Revenue Office,' The Courier, February 27, 1845. 'List of Subscribers,' The Courier, June 23, 1843
8. 'Local,' The Courier, March 15, 1848
9. Listed as 'Moses, Leopold H.', Rules of The Royal Society, 1848.
10. 'The Royal Society,' The Launceston Examiner, December 19, 1849
11. 'Subscriptions,' Courier, August 30, 1854
12. 'Cleared Out,' Colonial Times, May 25, 1854. ('Mr. Samuel Moses, Mrs. and Miss Moses and servant'.)
13. 'Frith v. Moses,' Tasmanian Daily News, June 22, 1855
14. Portrait of Mary Morton Allport. Oil painting, 'circa 1855, unsigned and undated, attributed to Conway Hart'. Allport Collection, State Library of Tasmania.
15. 'Mr. Conway Hart's Studio,' The Courier, October 24, 1855. Portrait of Mrs. Allport
16. 'Fashionable Intelligence,' Colonial Times, September 28, 1855
17. 'Hobart Town,' Launceston Advertiser, May 16, 1844
18. 'Fashionable Intelligence,' The Hobart Town Mercury, October 5, 1857.
19. 'Presentation to Samuel Moses, Esq., J.P.,' The Hobart Town Daily Mercury, December 22, 1858. Hobart businessman Phineas Moss was also Honourary Secretary of the Hobart Mechanics Institution and a member of The Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land.
20. Boa Vista was demolished in 1970, with the small classical gatehouse retained.
21. From website family history text by Lois Elden, England, July 2014. Elden is a great-grand-daughter of Samuel's son Louis. Willesden Jewish Cemetery received a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund in 2015 for restoration, a visitor centre, and a web-based history education project (Wikipedia).
22. 'An Old Friend,' The Age, April 18, 1857
23. 'A Card,' The Argus, July 14, 1860
VIRGINIA WRIGHT
Historian and author of Modern Furniture in Canada 1920 to 1970, (University of Toronto Press, Toronto), Launceston
Publishing details: A folder of detailed research on the Moses family, including research & correspondences by Paul Paffen, University of Melbourne, 1997,provided by the vendor of these portraits.
Annand Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
35.| Douglas Annand (Aust., 1903–1976) & Max Dupain (Aust., 1911–1992).| Australia,| c1937.| Colour process litho­ graph, signed “Douglas Annand” in image lower left, 100.6 x 62.3cm. Minor creases and tears.| $2950|
Text continues “Australian National Travel Association.” Held in
NGA, ANMM. “Douglas Annand was at the forefront of modern
graphic design in the 1930s and collaborated with the photographer
Max Dupain on numerous occasions, incorporating Dupain’s
photographs into his posters featuring photomontage, geometric
design and bold typefaces. Annand began his career in Brisbane in 1931 before relocating to Sydney and working on the publications |Home| and |Art in Australia.| He designed the ceiling for the Australian pavilion at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition and in 1939 was art director of the Australian pavilion at New York World’s Fair.” Ref: |The Guardian,| 13.7.2017.

Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Skate Ronald Clayton view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
61.| Ronald Clayton Skate (Aust., 1913–1990).| ANA Serves 47 Towns And Cities,| c1950s.| Colour process lithograph, signed in image centre left, 97.6 x 63.6cm. Slight foxing, repaired minor tears. Linen-backed.|
$2950| Text continues “Wing your way with ANA. Australian National Airways Pty Ltd. Enquire within for reservations and information.” Depicts a travel bag with stickers and a map showing the routes
and major destinations of ANA around Australia. Held in NLA. Australian National Airways (ANA) ran from 1936 to 1957 until its merger with Ansett. Ref: Wiki.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Nanninga Frank view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
63.| Frank Nanninga (Aust., 1920–1999).| Japan. Qantas,| c1950s.| Colour lithograph, signed in image lower left, 100.1 x 71.8cm. Repaired tears to lower portion of image. Linen-backed.
Text continues “Australia’s international airline. Qantas Empire Airways in association with British Overseas Airways Corporation and Tasman Empire Airways Ltd. Posters Pty Ltd,
Litho. Sydney.” Held in NLA.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Rogers Harry ,1929–2012view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
80.| HarryRogers(Aust.,1929–2012).| America.Qantas,| c1959.| Colourlithograph,initialledinimagelowerleft,99.5x 73.7cm. Repaired pinholes and tears, slight stains to edges of image. Linen-backed.|
$1950 Text continues “Australia’s overseas airline. In association with
BOAC and TEAL. Printed in Australia by Posters Pty Ltd.”
From the first issue of Qantas posters showing the silhouette of the Super Constellation airliner, used by Qantas from April 1954 to May 1963. Ref: MAAS.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Pinder Phil 1945–2004view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
109.| Phil Pinder (Aust., 1945–2004).| April Fools Night [At] Much More Ballroom,| 1972.| Screenprint, signed in image centre, 58.4 x 46.3cm. Old tape and water stains, minor missing portions to edges. Linen- backed.|
$1150| Text includes “[Bands] Indelible Murtceps, MacKenzie Theory, Lipp & The Double Decker Brothers with The Lippettes, The First National Jug Orchestra, Captain Matchbox. April 1st (Easter
Sat.), 8.30 sharp, 20 Brunswick St, Fitzroy.”
“Dedicated to celebrating Melbourne through his art [Phil Pinder] was a noted cartoonist, political satirist, designer and sculptor. He was a champion of public art.” Ref: |The Age,| 4.7.2005.

Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Cox Paulview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
119.| Paul Cox (Dutch/Aust., 1940–2016).| Paul Cox Is Exhibiting His Recent Photographs At Gallery 99,| c1975.| Process lithograph, 57.7 x 42.1cm. Slight surface loss to edges, upper right and lower left corners, repaired old folds.
Text continues “99 Cardigan St, Carlton. The opening is on Monday,
October 13 between 4.00 and 7.00.”
Born in Holland, film director, photographer and writer Paul Cox
settled in Australia in 1965, where he “took up a position teaching
film and photography at Prahran College [from 1969]. Here, he played an important role fostering the careers of young photographers such as Robert Ashton and Carol Jerrems. His European approach to art education helped establish Prahran College as one of the most progressive art schools in the country...As his obituary in |The New York Times| noted, he was ‘widely considered a father of Australian art cinema.’” Ref: Monash Gallery of Art; |The Canberra Times,| 27.8.1969.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Worstead Paul view full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
131.| Paul Worstead (Aust., b.1950).| Mental As Anything [Band],| c1979.| Colour screenprint, signed “Ashtray” in image lower right, annotated “next Thurs. 4th” in ink in lower panel, 76 x 51.6cm. Repaired minor tears to edges. Linen-backed.
The poster, depicting winged thongs, is promoting the band’s gig most likely held on Thursday, 4 January 1979 at the Civic Hotel
in Sydney.
Paul Worstead “is a conceptual artist, poster maker, T­shirt and fabric designer. A graduate of the East Sydney Technical College, Worstead has had a long association with Mental As Anything, having met the band members in art school. He has designed album covers for a number of well­known Australian recording artists...In 1971, Worstead launched the first of his own popular clothing labels, Ashtray...He has been designing for Mambo since 1985.” Ref: NPG.
and
136.| Paul Worstead (Aust., b.1950).| Christmas Festival,| 1980.| Colour screenprint, 75.9 x 50.6cm. Pinholes, repaired minor tears and crazing to lower portion of image. Linen-backed.|
$1850| Text includes “Sat. 6th Dec., at OLQP School, cnr Westminster and Victoria Rds, Gladesville, 10 to 4. Rides, stalls, music, ethnic food and dancing, Santa Claus, bar­b­q, fun and games. Australian Surf Riders Association NSW. Share the surf. Thirty
seconds over Gladesville. Natter with 99.” Held in NGA.
and two other posters
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Debenham Pamview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
150.| Pam Debenham (Aust., b.1955).| Artworkers Union Benefit Dance,| 1982.| Colour screenprint, signed by Debenham and “Lucifoil Posters” [Collective] studio line in image lower right, 76.2 x 50.8cm. Linen-backed.|
$1450| Text continues “You’ve got to have a sense of humour post­ Biennale depression. Tactics, Funny Stories, Ya Ya Choral. $4, Thursday Aug. 26th, 8pm. Trade Union Club, 111 Foveaux St,
Surry Hills.” Held in NGA.
This poster shows an image from neurologist Guillaume­ Benjamin Duchenne and photographer Adrien Tournachon’s 1862 book |Mecanisme de la Physionomie Humaine (The Mechanism of Human Physiognomy),| with a Transfield Pty Ltd caption on an electroshock machine. Transfield were sponsors of the Sydney Biennale from its establishment in 1973 until 2014. Ref: SBS, 7.4.2014; Wiki.
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
Sim Raymondview full entry
Reference: see Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
180. |Raymond Sim, Australian Lithographer, Collection Of Posters,| 1936–c1960s. 126 lithographs and 4 booklets of
progressive proofs and one watercolour, sizes range from 33 x 25cm to 102 x 76cm. Tears, creases, old folds, a few posters with foxing, minor insect damage or missing portions.|
The collection $POA| Raymond Sim was an Australian lithographer, illustrator and master printmaker. His commercial work spans from 1936 until the 1960s, and covers an extensive range of posters and advertising material for
renowned Australian brands such as Akubra hats and Bushell’s tea.
The quality and variety of Sims’ work, as a commercial lithographer, is seen in this irreplaceable collection highlighting the relationship between an artist’s created image, and a lithographer’s faithful reproduction of it. The collection includes images designed by Walter Jardine, Alan D. Baker, Dahl Collings, Richard Beck, Byram Mansell, Ron Chaddock, and Frank McNamara.
Brands and subjects included in the collection are Stamina and Crusader Cloth, Tooth & Tooheys drinks, Radiotrons valves for defence, Akubra hats, travel posters, the Sydney Royal Easter show, Bushell’s tea, Cottee’s fruit drinks, Sterling­Nyal pharmaceutical and beauty products, Parke­Davis pharmaceutical products, Brasso, Streets ice cream, Rosslyn hosiery, Max Factor lipstick, Hardibestos brake linings, Tecnico, the Olympics, Kent Brewery, the Methodist Church of Australia, educational animal charts, a Byram Mansell painting for a Pincombe calendar, and proof sheets of Australiana greeting cards.
A partially illustrated list can be seen at raymondsimartist.com.
32
One hundred and twenty­six (126) colour and process lithographs, plus four booklets of
Publishing details: Josef Lebovic Australian & International Posters, Collectors’ List No. 197, 2019:
modern artview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Pynor Henry and Frank Weitzel essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Weitzel Frank and Henry Pynor essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Lange Eleanore 1893-1990 essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Herzger-Seligmann Gertrude 1901-1977 essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Fooks Ernest architect - essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Duldig Slawa 1901-1975 essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Duldig Karl in essay on wife Slawa Duldigview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Hirschfeld-Mack Ludwig 2 essaysview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Teltscher Georg 1904-1983 essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Collings Dahl and Geoffrey essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Morrison Alistair essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
James Richard Haughton essayview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Burke Joseph see essay chapter 5view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Hoff Ursula see essay chapter 5view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Philipp Franz see essay chapter 5view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Langer Gertrude see essay chapter 5view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Seidler Harry essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Seidler Harry essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Hinder Frank essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Sellbach Udo essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kral George 1928-1978 essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Janeba Fritz and Kathe essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Boyd Robin essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Haythornwaite Peter essay view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Adams Tate 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Andrews Gordon 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Annand Douglas 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Baines Robert 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Balson Ralph 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Bartlett Geoffrey 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Bass Tom 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Brack John 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Buhrich Hugh and Eva various refs John 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Buzzacott Nutter 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Cant James 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Dadswell Lyndon various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Danciger 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Danciger Alice 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Dall’ava Augustine 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Dawson Janet various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
de Maistre Roy various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Derham Frances various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Devlin Stuart 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Fabian Erwin numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Featherston Grant 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Feddersen Jutta see Schley Jutta p207-8view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Feint Adrian 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Fizelle Rah 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Flugelman Bert 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
French Leonard 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Friedeberger Klaus 9 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Gallery A numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Gleeson James 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Greenhalgh Voctor 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Greschel Erika 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Grieve Robert 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Haefliger Paul 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Halpern Stanislav 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Haxton Elaine 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Herman Sali 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Johnson George 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Jomantas Vincas 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Jones Stephen 3refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kane Julius 7 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kaplan John 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kennedy Peter 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
King Grahame 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Klippel Robert 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kral George 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Kral George 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Langer Eleanor see numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Langer Karl numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Last Clifford 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Lindsay Daryl 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Lewers Margo 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Meldrum James 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Miksevicius Jurgis 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Missingham Hal 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Nagel Elizabeth 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Neale Douglas 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Orban Desiderius 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Ostoja-Kotkowski Stanislaus 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Parr Lenton 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Redpath Norma various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Shaw Roderick 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Sievers Wolfgang various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Smith Bernard various refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Snelling Douglas 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Spiegel Hedwig or Heide 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Strizic Mark 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Stryzygowski Oskar 10 refs refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Talbot Henry 3 refs refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Taylor Florence editor 2 refs refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Vassilieff Danila 3 refs view full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wakelin Roland 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Waugh Ellen 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wennrich Wolfram 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Werner Otto 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
White Mary 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wright Normana 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wigley James 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wilfred Thomas 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wrigley Derek 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Wunsche Isabel 1 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Young Diana 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Young Michael 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Yura Shigeru 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Zagorski Edward refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Zdanowicz Irena 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Zika Miroslav 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Zikaras Teisulis 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond -
Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture by Philip Goad, Ann Stephen, Andrew McNamara, Harriet Edquist, Isabel Wünsche. [’A history of Bauhaus in Australia and New Zealand.
Bauhaus Diaspora and Beyond: Transforming Education through Art, Design and Architecture presents an extraordinary new Australasian cultural history. It is a migrant and refugee story: from 1930, the arrival of so many emigre, internee and refugee educators helped to transform art, architecture and design in Australia and New Zealand. Fifteen thematic essays and twenty individual case studies bring to light a tremendous amount of new archival material in order to show how these innovative educators, exiled from Nazism, introduced Bauhaus ideas and models to a new world. As their Bauhaus model spanned art, architecture and design, the book provides a unique cross-disciplinary, emigre history of art education in Australia and New Zealand. It offers a remarkable and little-known chapter in the wider Bauhaus venture, which has multiple legacies and continues to inform our conceptions of progressive education, creativity and the role of art and design in the wider community.
A co-production by MUP with Power Publications’]
Publishing details: Miegunyah Press, an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing ; published with Power Publications, 2019, v, 279 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Series Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; no. 185. 2019. Includes bilbliographical references and index.
Modernismview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
feminismview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Women artistsview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
galleriesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
public galleriesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Australia Councilview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
colonialism view full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
nationalismview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Austraiian Gallery Directors Councilview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Clune Galleriesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Field The exhibitionview full entry
Reference: see Australian art exhibitions : opening our eyes / Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck. [’This publication outlines the exciting and often controversial development of Australia's public galleries and the changing conditions that have determined their exhibition program from the 1960's to the present.The extravagantly illustrated chapters are based on the extensive research of four authors associated with four universities from three states.Richly annotated with multiple appendices and a comphrehensive index of more than 1,500 entries, this publication is an incredible resource for Australian art history that concludes with an analysis of the value of exhibitions that enables visitors to see art with fresh eyes and see the world anew.
Full contents • Foreword
• Introduction
• 1. Taking the initiative : state gallery directors in the 1950s & 1960s
• 2. A national picture : the impact of Whitlam and the Australia Council
• 3. Exhibitions re-defining the nature of art
• 4. Blockbuster exhibitions and their consequences
• 5. Re-examining Australia's past : colonialism and nationalism
• 6. The centenary years and beyond
• 7. Australian modernism
• 8. Modernism, feminism : what of the women?’]
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson, 2018, 416 pages : illustrations (some colour), facsimilies (chiefly colour), portraits (some colour)
Utopia women's paintingsview full entry
Reference: Utopia women's paintings : the first works on canvas : a summer project 1988-89 : the Robert Holmes à Court Collection. Exhibition held at S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, 14 April-21 May 1989. Curator, Anne Brody.
Catalogue of a collection of 81 paintings produced by women living on Utopia, 240km N.E. of Alice Springs.
Publishing details: Heytesbury Holdings, [1989] 
1 folded sheet (8 p.) : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Utopia women's paintings : the first works on canvas : a summer project 1988-89 : the Robert Holmes à Court Collection. Exhibition held at S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, 14 April-21 May 1989. Curator, Anne Brody.
Catalogue of a collection of 81 paintings produced by women living on Utopia, 240km N.E. of Alice Springs.
Publishing details: Heytesbury Holdings, [1989] 
1 folded sheet (8 p.) : col. ill.
Beyond the Paleview full entry
Reference: Beyond the pale : contemporary indigenous art : 2000 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art / Art Gallery of South Australia ; curated by Brenda L. Croft. Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art (2000). Includes works by Ian W. Abdulla; Destiny Deacon; Julie Dowling; Lola Greeno; Gordon Hookey; Gertie Huddleston; Kitty Kantilla/Kutuwalumi Purawarrumpatu; Yvonne Koolmatrie; Abraham Mongkorrerre; Clinton Nain; Rosella Namok; Mitjili Napurrula; Jimmy Njiminjuma; Lena Nyadbi; Kathleen Petyarre; Rea; Ginger Riley; Darren Siwes; Long Tom Tjapanangka; Ken Thaiday Sr; Judy Watson; Joyce Winsley & Pedro Wonaeamirri.


Publishing details: Art Gallery Board of South Australia, 2000, 112 p. : col. ill., map
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Beyond the pale : contemporary indigenous art : 2000 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art / Art Gallery of South Australia ; curated by Brenda L. Croft. Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art (2000)
Publishing details: Art Gallery Board of South Australia, 2000, 112 p. : col. ill., map
We Iri - We Homebornview full entry
Reference: We Iri - We Homeborn : big shots : catalogue, National Gallery of Victoria ; curator Maree Clarke.

Publishing details: National Gallery of Victoria.1996, 10 pages : illustrated

Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see We Iri - We Homeborn : big shots : catalogue, National Gallery of Victoria ; curator Maree Clarke.

Publishing details: National Gallery of Victoria.1996, 10 pages : illustrated

1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Artview full entry
Reference: 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013, hc, 92pp
Burn Ianview full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013
Cutforth Rogerview full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013
Ramsden Melview full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013
6 Photographersview full entry
Reference: Max Dupain, Axel Poignant, Hal Missingham, David Potts, Kerry Dundas and Gordon Andrews. [This catalogue cited in Australian Art Exhibitions, Opening Our Eyes, by Joanna Mendelssohn, Catherine de Lorenzo, Alison Inglis, Catherine Speck, T & H, 2018, in the list of exhibitions pages 382-388].
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2009
Ref: 1000
Ohlfsen Doraview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald for article by Linda Morris on the artist’s unrealised work and a forthcoming exhibition. Includes biograohical information.
Publishing details: SMH, 28-29 September, 2019, p20.
Ref: 139
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Ebay listing 29 September, 2019: original watercolour sketch executed by English born painter - CHARLES CONDOR (1868 - 1909 ) 

The artwork on a 8.75 x 5.5 inch mounted page is signed and dated " Charles Condor Dieppe 1897 " . 

Provenance : removed from an album belonging to Beatrice Capel , later Lady Michelham . 

Bertha Capel was the daughter of Arthur Capel , a wealthy shipping merchant , and sister of Coco Chanel's lover " Boy " Capel . 

Please see images for content and condition ( slight rippling to left side ) 

Bayly Samiview full entry
Reference: The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Ugly Animals by Sami Bayly. [’Marvel as you enter the fascinating hidden world of ugly animals in this encyclopaedia of the animal kingdom's most unusual and beauty-challenged species. It's time for ugly animals to shine! With more than sixty ugly animals to explore, this compendium of the unusual celebrates the beauty in 'ugliness'. Children and adults alike will pore over the breathtaking scientific illustrations of unusual animals, debating their relative ugliness and merits, learning about science and nature along the way. Featuring illustrations and facts about the thorniest species the animal kingdom has to offer, from the naked mole rat to the goblin shark, aye-aye, sphinx cat, blobfish and many more 'ugly' beauties.’]
Publishing details: Hachette Australia, 2019 
Ref: 1000
Bayly Samiview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald article on The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Ugly Animals by Sami Bayly.
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, 30 September, 2019, p16
Menpes Mortimerview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books, New Acquisitions, October, 2019:
Mortimer Menpes, Adelaide-born British artist : autograph note, signed, revealing his romantic feelings towards a young woman, possibly Australian socialite Pearl Faithfull. London, circa 1899.
Manuscript in ink on [2] pp of an octavo bifolium (180 x 110 mm), on embossed letterhead with Menpes’ Chelsea address ’25 Cadogan Gardens, S.W.’ (this residence, which Menpes had designed by the architect Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo and which was spectacularly decorated in the Japanese style, was completed in 1888, and Menpes and his family lived there until 1900), headed ‘Tuesday’ (no month or year); the addressee is given in the form of a cipher or monogram which incorporates the initials P and G (?) and two small circles (pearls?); the recipient was possibly wealthy Australian socialite Pearl Faithfull (later Lady Dilke), as the letter was originally in an album of autographs and letters which were collected by her during her time in London; marginal browning from old glue stains, the second leaf a little faded, mounting residue to the verso, not affecting the manuscript itself.
Transcript of note: ‘Dear [monogram], Tomorrow I shall be acting on a jury and likely to be kept till late. I am sorry to miss seeing you. I did think you were to be [with] Collins’ party at the Carlton or else I should not have turned up. I was sorry to find you so situated that I could not join you for a talk. I longed for a talk. Yours in friendship, Mortimer Menpes.’
Provenance: From an album compiled by Florence Pearl Faithfull (known as “Pearl”), later Lady Dilke. Pearl Faithfull was born in Concord, Sydney in 1875. She was the daughter of solicitor Henry Montague Faithfull (1848-1908), and the grand-daughter of the Australian pastoralist and politician William Pitt Faithfull, owner of Springfield Station, south of Goulburn, New South Wales. In London in July 1915 Pearl married Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, but following his descent into insanity and subsequent death in 1918 she returned to Australia. She later returned to England, and died in Hove, Sussex in 1955.
In this intriguing autograph note the flamboyant painter Mortimer Menpes reveals his romantic interest in a woman who clearly moves in London’s most elite social circles. He avoids naming her explicitly, preferring instead to address her using an artistic, cryptic monogram. Evidently there was an element of danger in arranging an assignation with her: in London in 1875, Menpes had married fellow Australian Rosa Mary Grosse (1857-1936), who had travelled from Adelaide to London on the RMSS Nubia with Menpes and his family the previous year. She had inherited a fortune on the death of her father, a circumstance which undoubtedly enabled Menpes and his family to lead a lavish lifestyle in London, to visit Japan and, not least, to pay for the fabulously opulent residence at 25 Cadogan Gardens. The couple had four children and remained married and close up until Rosa’s death in 1936. This note, then, is all the more interesting since it hints at a temptation to mid-life infidelity. We do not know if Menpes’ obvious infatuation went any further than the writing of secretive notes expressing desire and yearning.
The Carlton Hotel, owned by César Ritz, and with Auguste Escoffier as the head chef, was London’s most fashionable hotel and restaurant. It was opened in July 1899, a year prior to Menpes moving out of his opulent residence at 25 Cadogan Gardens in 1900. These two facts help greatly in narrowing the date range for when Menpes could have penned his note.
Whether or not the strikingly beautiful Pearl Faithfull was the recipient of this missive is a matter for conjecture. However, the fact that she placed a note of such a private nature for safekeeping in her album would suggest it was addressed to her, leading us to speculate that the “P” in the monogram stands for Pearl. The other letter in the monogram, “G”, is problematic though. Could it have stood for an affectionate nickname?
A studio portrait photograph of Pearl taken in London around this time (i.e. circa 1900) is held in the National Museum of Australia’s Springfield Collection.
Roughsey Dickview full entry
Reference: Moon and rainbow : the autobiography of an Aboriginal.
[’Dick Roughesy was an indigenous Australian artist from the Lardil language group on Mornington Island in the south-eastern Gulf of Carpentaria, Queensland.’]

Publishing details: Sydney : A.H. & A.W. Reed, 1971. First edition. Tall octavo, publisher’s green cloth covered boards in pictorial dust jacket, endpaper maps. pp 168, illustrated with colour and b/w plates and line drawings in the text;
Ref: 1009
Colonial Furnitureview full entry
Reference: see Australian Colonial Furniture by John Buttsworth
Publishing details: Colonial Living Press, 1987, 140pp with index
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Ernabella batiks in the Hilliard Collection of the National Museum of Australia by David Kaus, profusely illustrated in colour
Publishing details: Canberra : NMA, 2004. Square octavo, illustrated card covers, 80 pp,
Ref: 1000
batiksview full entry
Reference: see Ernabella batiks in the Hilliard Collection of the National Museum of Australia by David Kaus, profusely illustrated in colour
Publishing details: Canberra : NMA, 2004. Square octavo, illustrated card covers, 80 pp,
Ernabella batiksview full entry
Reference: see Ernabella batiks in the Hilliard Collection of the National Museum of Australia by David Kaus, profusely illustrated in colour
Publishing details: Canberra : NMA, 2004. Square octavo, illustrated card covers, 80 pp,
Kupka Karelview full entry
Reference: Dawn of art : Painting and sculpture of Australian Aborigines by Karel Kupka.
With a foreword by A. P. Elkin and a preface by Andre Breton. Sydney :
Publishing details: Angus and Robertson, 1965. First English language edition. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, pp. x; 180, plates in colour and black and white,
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Dawn of art : Painting and sculpture of Australian Aborigines by Karel Kupka.
With a foreword by A. P. Elkin and a preface by Andre Breton. Sydney :
Publishing details: Angus and Robertson, 1965. First English language edition. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, pp. x; 180, plates in colour and black and white,
Nixon Johnview full entry
Reference: Tableaux

Publishing details: Geelong : Deakin University Gallery, 1991. Quarto, cards in dustjacket, unpaginated, photographic plates. Printed in an edition of 500 copies.
Ref: 1000
Persson Stiegview full entry
Reference: History Painting. [’Considers the moral dimension of painting. The works tackle some of the ethical conundrums of our time by communicating certain attitudes to contemporary events. These works eschew postmodernist irony, or appropriated imagery and seek, instead, to express outrage, sorrow and a sense of perversity.
Stieg Persson’s practice explores the found object, drawing on a modernist tradition that extends from Duchamp to Beuys. His work contains traces of everyday life, yet his style is otherworldly as swirling forms emerge from dark tonal backgrounds. His inclusion of text within History Painting starts to question where the message is coming from: Is it the text or the form, colour, texture or composition? Persson’s work dissolves the modernist concept, while at the same time extending its formal strengths.’]
Publishing details: Anna Schwartz Gallery, 2006. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, pp. 64, illustrated. New copy.
Ref: 1000
Papapetrou Polixeniview full entry
Reference: A performative paradox

Publishing details: Melbourne : Centre for Contemporary Photography, 2013. Octavo, pp. 24, illustrated. Published for the occasion of the exhibition of the same title at the Centre for Contemporary Photography, 24 May – 14 July 2013
Ref: 1000
nudesview full entry
Reference: see Smith Geoffrey FRPS, Australian Nudes. illustrated throughout; Originally issued in restricted circulation and scarce in the market.
Publishing details: Sun Books, 1973. Quarto, [pp. 108], original stiff pictorial wrappers,
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: Australian writers and their work : Norman Lindsay. by John Hetherington.
Edited by Geoffrey Dutton. text on the Australian artist and writer Norman Lindsay..
Publishing details: Melbourne : Lansdowne Press, 1961. Second edition, 1962. Octavo, lettered wrappers, pp. 48, tipped in frontispiece reproduction of a portrait of Norman Lindsay from a dry-point etching by Sir Lionel Lindsay,
Ref: 1000
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: Ian Fairweather: A Life in Letters by
Claire Roberts and John Thompson. [’When he died in 1974 after a long period of self-imposed austerity and improvisation on Bribie Island, Queensland, Ian Fairweather was at the apex of his fame. He had been called ‘our greatest painter’, and his works were keenly sought by galleries, collectors and artists.
Born in 1891 in Scotland, Fairweather had lived a peripatetic life, forever seeking the right place to settle. He was a prodigious and idiosyncratic letter writer—wryly documenting for friends and family members his travels, his struggles with his painting and Chinese translations, and the changing conditions on Bribie, as well as commenting on literature and world affairs.
Seven hundred of the painter’s letters are known to be in existence, and in their selection Claire Roberts and John Thompson have created the definitive volume of Fairweather’s correspondence: the closest thing to an autobiography of one of Australia’s most important and enduring artists.’]
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Claire Roberts is an associate professor in art history and an ARC Future Fellow at the University of Melbourne, and has published widely on Chinese art and visual culture, and curated numerous exhibitions.

John Thompson is a historian who worked at the National Library of Australia for many years, and the author ofThe Patrician and the Bloke: Geoffrey Serle and the Making of Australian History.
Publishing details: Text Publishing, 2019, 574pp, soft cover, with index.
David Haroldview full entry
Reference: Beauty and the Apocalypse, catalogue with 16 illustrations, brief note by the artist.
Publishing details: Day Gallery, Blackheath, NSW, 2019, 16pp
Ref: 1000
Robinson John Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons auction, Australian And International Art, Oct 14, 2019,, lots 532 and 53,
JOHN EDWARD ROBINSON (1935-2007)
Tranquility, 1979
woven wool tapestry
edition: 3/6
woven at the Atelier Goubely, Aubusson, inventory no.7, 1979
198 x 314cm

NOTE
This design from Robinson's 'Universe Series' is an abstracted representation of a goldfish in a lily pond reflecting the sky.
Robinson's tapestries were woven of Australian wool at Aubusson and have been exhibited in Australia and extensively overseas.




Artists’ Portraitsview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
O’Connor Kathleenview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Proctor Theaview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Lahey Vidaview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Frater Williamview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Perry Adelaideview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Mayo Daphneview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Rehfisch Alisonview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Smith Treaniaview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Annand Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Stokes Constanceview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Lewers Margoview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Pidgeon Williamview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Kmit Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Dryasdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Counihan Noelview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Lymburner Francisview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Strachan Davidview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Molvig Jonview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Baldessin Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Artists’ Portraits by Geofftey Dutton. Foreword by Warren Horton. Interviews of the artists by Hazel de Berg. Includes extensive biographical outlines of the 26 artists included. Also includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 1992, pb. 171pp, illustrations. Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-5444775
Australian Painters - Forty Profiles view full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Annois Lenview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Bell Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Bush Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Smith Jack Caringtonview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Cassab Judyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Counihan Noelview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Crooke Rayview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Dargie Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Dickerson Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Frater Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
French Leonardview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Gleghorn Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Grey-Smith Guyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Haxton Elaineview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Hele Ivorview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Herman Saliview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Heysen Hansview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Hodgkinson Frankview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Kahan Louisview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Lindsay Darylview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Molvig Jonview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
O’Brien Justinview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Shore Arnoldview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Waller Napierview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Wheeler Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
Wigley Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Painters - Forty Profiles, by John Hetherington. Extensive biographical essay on each of the 40 artists written by John Hetherington. Includes portrait drawings by Louis Kahan of each of the artists . Includes one illustation by each artist.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Cheshire, 1963 
240 p. : ill.
River on the Brink: inside the Murray-Darling Basinview full entry
Reference: River on the Brink: inside the Murray-Darling Basin, exhibition presented in collaboration with Broken Hill Regional Art Gallery. This catalogue accompanies the National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery's timely exhibition River on the Brink, curated by Gavin Wilson and presented in collaboration with Broken Hill Regional Art Gallery. The exhibtion focuses on what is the most pressing environmental crisis of our time: the on-going devastation of the Murray-Darling Basin. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: ecatalogue at https://issuu.com/nationaltrustsaustralia/docs/river_on_the_brink_-_ecatalogue
Ref: 1000
Andrew Brookview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, Good Weekend article by Brook Turner
Publishing details: SMH, Good Weekend, Oct 5 2019, p19-22
Barclay Henry Vere1845-1917view full entry
Reference: see Henry Adams Auction, West Sussex, UK, 10 Oct, 2019. lot 659: Henry Vere Barclay (British 1845-1917), a collection of monochrome watercolour and ink sketches of Easter Island, HMS Resolution and HMS Topaze, largest 23.5cm by 33cm, unframed (a/f), Henry Barclay was a lieutenant in the Royal Marine Light Infantry and explored central Australia
Prout John Skinnerview full entry
Reference: see Chiswick Auctions, 29 Oct, 2019, lot 66: JOHN SKINNER PROUT NWS (BRITISH 1806–1876)
Place St Sever, Rouen
Titled and dated Feb/36 (lower right)
Pencil heightened with white on grey paper
16.5 x 24.5cm (6 1/4 x 9 1/2in)

John Skinner Prout emigrated to Australia in 1840 and set up the JSP Australian Lithographic Establishment. He moved to Tasmania in 1844 and returned to England in 1848. On his return he worked in Bristol becoming a friend of William Muller's and a founder member of the Bristol Sketching Club. 
Kal-Ma-Kuta-Dux Daphneview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald article, 7 October, 2019
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, 7 October, 2019, p15
Messiah Yosi b1964view full entry
Reference: see Widewalls website: Yosi Messiah is an Australian artist born in Israel in 1964. He migrated to Australia in 1987. Known as a successful abstract painter, Messiah began exploring the figurative style of painting in 2010.
As a child, Yosi wanted to become an animator, so he spent his time drawing cartoon characters. The artist was the owner of a successful jewelry business, however, propelled by his creative curiosity, he enrolled at Charlie Shed’s School in 1996, where he studied painting. After that, in 1997, Yosi studied life drawing at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney. He has worked as an artist ever since. After painting abstract art for 16 years, Yosi changed the direction and started creating quirky and edgy figurative works.
He was a finalist in many art prizes, such as Paddington Art Prize in 2008 and 2015, Mosman Art Prize in 2010 and 2012, and Waverley Art Prize in 2009. The first solo exhibition where he presented his figurative works was the show titled Sensual Season, at Art2Muse Gallery in Sydney’s Double Bay in 2014.
Messiah’s work is featured in numerous collections, such as Ian Thorpe, Intercontinental Hotels, Craig Ruddy, Raptis Group RLD, St Vincent Hospital Darlinghurst and Marriott Hotels.
Mixed media and varnish on canvas
Yosi Messiah lives and works in Sydney, Australia.








Publishing details: He is represented by 19 Karen Contemporary Artspace in Gold Coast, Australia.
Davenport Joview full entry
Reference: ‘Red Sky in the Morning’, exhibition invite with 1-page essay.and 5 illustrations
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery 2019, 6pp folding card
Ref: 1000
Cayley Nevilleview full entry
Reference: see The La Trobe Journal No. 97 March 2016:
‘The premier bird painter of the colonies’:1 the triumphant return of Neville Henry Cayley to Victoria’ by Mark R.Cabouret.

Publishing details: The La Trobe Journal No. 97 March 2016, p44-62
Ostoja-Kotkowski Stanislaus view full entry
Reference: see Stanislaus Ostoja-Kotkowski
Online Exhibition till 21st December, 2019, by Charles Nodrum Gallery.
[’Born in Poland in 1922, Ostoja-Kotkowski studied at the Dusseldorf Academy of Arts before moving to Australia in 1949, where he continued studies at the National Gallery of Victoria School.  His multidisciplinary practice included large-scale murals in mosaic, metal work, bas-relief and theatre décor, as well as photography, film, glass work and magazine illustration.  Best known for his Optical and Kinetic painting, he was a leading practitioner of early electronic, sound and light displays in the 1970s which married art with science and design.
 
The works are not on view publically in the gallery, but are available for viewing by appointment - please contact us to arrange a time.’]
Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 2019
Q R C [RCQ]view full entry
Reference: Visitors' illustrated guide to Geelong, with a brief description of Lorne / penned and pencilled by R. C. Q.





Publishing details: Geelong : Henry Franks, 1879, 40 pages, [6] leaves of plates (1 folded) : illustrations, portrait ; 19 cm.
Ref: 1000
Sydney International Exhibition Victorian Court 1879. view full entry
Reference: Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. [The artists have been indexed].
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp. Photocopy.
Ref: 140
colonial artview full entry
Reference: see Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ATYEO FREDERICK Kview full entry
Reference: ATYEO, FREDERICK K., Carlton, Melbourne.
267 Statuary Truss Leaves, Marble Paper Weights, Sample of
Inlaid Work in Colonial Marbles, Carving in Oamaru
Stone, Stalactite from South Australia.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
DEL VESCOVA & SANI,view full entry
Reference: DEL YESCOYA & SANI, William-street, Melbourne.
268 Figures and Bust, in Marble.
269 Bas-reliefs, iu Marble.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
VESCOVA view full entry
Reference: DEL YESCOYA & SANI, William-street, Melbourne.
268 Figures and Bust, in Marble.
269 Bas-reliefs, iu Marble.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Saniview full entry
Reference: DEL YESCOYA & SANI, William-street, Melbourne.
268 Figures and Bust, in Marble.
269 Bas-reliefs, iu Marble.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
FALLER FRANCOISview full entry
Reference: FALLER, FRANCOIS, Lonsdale-street east, Melbourne.
270 Specimens of Workmanship in Sicilian Marble.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
MACKENNAL JOHN Sview full entry
Reference: MACKENNAL, JOHN S., 198 Collins-street east, Melbourne.
271 “ Phaeton driving the Horses of the Sun.”
272 “ Venus and Cupid.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
NIVEN F Wview full entry
Reference: NIVEN, F. W., Sturt-street, Ballarat.
•278 Statuette, “ Rembrandt.”
■274 „ “ Musidora.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
SCURRY JAMESview full entry
Reference: SCURRY, JAMES, 172 Lonsdale-street east, Melbourne.
275 Model in Plaster, “ Yenus and train.”
276 „ „ “ Yenus and Cupid.”
277 Bust of the late Mr. Justice Fellows,

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ALTMANN ERNST Aview full entry
Reference: ALTMANN, ERNST A., 80 Elizabeth-street, Melbourne.
279 Medal Dies, and impressions from same.
280 Models in Metal (oxydized) of Aboriginals, Animals, &c,

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ASHTON J Rview full entry
Reference: ASHTON, J, R., Age Office, Collins-street, Melbourne.
282 “ A Chip of the Old Block.”
283 “ The Boldest of the Party.”
284 “ Beg Floss.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CAMPBELL, M. Aview full entry
Reference: CAMPBELL, M. A., Lochend, Punt-road, Windsor, Melbourne
287 “ Moonlight.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Ball Missview full entry
Reference: BALL, MISS, Bloomfield, Victoria-street, St. Kilda, Melbourne.
285 “ Gabriel’s Gully, N.Z.”
286 “ Schnapper Point, Port Phillip Bay.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CAMPBELL 0 Rview full entry
Reference: CAMPBELL, 0. R., Lochend, Punt-road, Windsor, Melbourne.
288 “The Origin of Painting.”
“It is said that a young Greek girl, seeing the shadow of her
lover’s profile on the wall, endeavoured to preserve it hy
tracing the outline, and that this was the first step towards the
study of painting.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Carter Johnview full entry
Reference: CARTER, JOHN, 23 Drummond-street, Carlton, Melbourne.
289 “ Fruit.”
290 “ Bird’s Nest.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CASELLI HENRY RICHARDSview full entry
Reference: CASELLI, HENRY RICHARDS, Architect, Ballarat.
291 “ Summer Evening on Lake Wendouree, Ballarat.” Artist—

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Knud Bullview full entry
Reference: Knud Bull, Academies of Copenhagen and Dresden.
292 “ Brigantine running up the British Channel.” Artist
unknown.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
EARLES CHESTER view full entry
Reference: EARLES, CHESTER (President Victorian Academy of Arts),
Banks’ Clearing House, Collins-street west, Melbourne.
295 “ The Third Day of a Hot Wind.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
FORD WILLIAMview full entry
Reference: FORD, WILLIAM, Clieve Cottage, Inkerman-street, St. Kilda,.
Melbourne.
296 “ White Elowers.”
297 “By the Wayside.”
298 “ Virginia.”
299 “ Effect of Light, seen near Eltham, Victoria.”
300 “ Gossip at the Farm.”
301 “ White Lily and Carnation.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Fuller S Pview full entry
Reference: FULLER, S. P., Danetree Cottage, Balaclava-road, St. K ilda,
Melbourne.
302 “ Cumberland Creek, Loutit Bay.”
303 “ Erskine Falls, Otway Ranges,”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
GOURLAY MISS MARY JANEview full entry
Reference: GOURLAY, MISS MARY JANE, 200 Cecil-street, Albert Park,
Melbourne.
304 “ A Norwegian Fjord,” after Dantze.
305 “ A Winter Morning near Heidelberg,” after Buvelot.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
VON GUERARD EUGENE view full entry
Reference: GUERARD, EUGENE VON, Gipps-street, East Melbourne.
306 “Milford Sound, with Pembroke Peak and Bowen Falls
N.Z ”
307 “ Lake Wakatipa.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
HULME EDWARDview full entry
Reference: HULME, EDWARD, Milawa, Oxley.
308 “Evening Glow.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
JARRETT W Hview full entry
Reference: JARRETT, W. H., Collins-street, Melbourne.
309 “ The Head of Ullswater, England.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
MURCOTT THEOview full entry
Reference: MURCOTT, THEO., 3 Erin-street, North Richmond, Melbourne.
310 “ Last Glimpses.”
311 “ Fresh Gathered.”
312 “ Head of an Old Warrior.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
NELSON J Mview full entry
Reference: NELSON, J. M., 5 Grey-street, East Melbourne.
313 “ Valley of the Goulburn, N.S.W.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
PANTON J Aview full entry
Reference: PANTON, J. A. (P.M.), Melbourne.
314 “ Eagle Nest Rock, South Coast.”
315 “ Lagoon at Perricoota, River Murray.”
316 “ Grampians, from Stawell.”
317 “ Foggy Morning, Eltham Road.”
318 “ Nanny,” a Lubra, Swan Hill tribe.
319 “ Winter near Marysville, Yarra Ranges.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
PARSONS MRS GEORGEview full entry
Reference: PARSONS, MRS. GEORGE, Chari wood-road, St. Hilda,
Melbourne.
320 “ View at Lome.”
321 “A Gully in the Dandenong Ranges.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
PATERSON MISS CATHERINE Wview full entry
Reference: PATERSON, MISS CATHERINE W., 144 Flinders-street west,
Melbourne.
322 li Home, Sweet Home.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RASCHE W (C. E.)view full entry
Reference: RASCHE, W. (C. E.), 55 Elizabeth-street, Melbourne.
323 “ Portrait of a Gentleman.”
324 ditto

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RICHARDSON C Dview full entry
Reference: RICHARDSON, C. D., Gurner-street, St. Hilda, Melbourne.
325 “ CEdipus Slaying his Father, Laius.”
“ Laius haughtily ordered CEdipus to make way for him ; he refused,
and a contest ensued, in which both Laius and his armourbearer
were killed.”
326 “ After a Shower, at Beechworth.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RIELLY Henryview full entry
Reference: RIELLY, Henry., Eastbourne-street, Windsor, Melbourne.
327 “ The Murray, at Corowa.”
328 “ Lagoon at Wahgunyah, old bed of the Murray.”
329 “ Stony Creek.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RIELLY MISSview full entry
Reference: RIELLY, MISS, Eastbourne-street, Windsor, Melbourne.
330 “ Brighton and Elsternwick Beach.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Roberts A Mview full entry
Reference: Roberts A. M., 170 George-street, Fitzroy, Melbourne.
331 “ Dancing Girl ” (copy).


from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
STEVENSON THOMASview full entry
Reference: STEVENSON THOMAS, 181 King-street, Melbourne.
332 Specimens Armorial Paintings.


from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
TURNER CHARLESview full entry
Reference: TURNER, CHARLES, Swanston-street, Melbourne.
333 “On the Esk, Tasmania.”
334 “ Landscape and Cattle.”


from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
TWENTYMAN G O & Sonview full entry
Reference: TWENTYMAN, G. 0., & SON, Regent-street, North Richmond,
Melbourne.
335 Heraldic Painting in Water Colour.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
VAN DEN HOUTEN H Lview full entry
Reference: VAN DEN HOUTEN, H. L., Henry-street, Windsor, Melbourne.
336 “ Batman’s First Meeting with Buckley in 1836.”
337 “On the Road to Wood’s Point.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
WHITEHEAD ISAACview full entry
Reference: WHITEHEAD, ISAAC, 56 Punt-road, Melbourne.
337 a “ Near Fernshaw.”
337 b “ Milford, N.Z.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
WILLIAMS J Rview full entry
Reference: WILLIAMS, J. R., Custom House, Melbourne.
338 “ Myrtle Creek, Victoria.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
WILSON C Vview full entry
Reference: WILSON, C. V., Academy of Arts, Melbourne.
339 “ Little Nell.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CAMPBELL M Aview full entry
Reference: CAMPBELL, M. A., Lochend, Punt-road, Windsor, Melbourne.
340 “ Old Barn at Bulleen, Victoria.”
339 “ Little Nell.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
BOOBIER MISS NELLYview full entry
Reference: BOOBIER, MISS NELLY, 2 View Hill Terrace, Sandhurst,
341. Water Colour Paintings on silk and satin.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CARTER JOHNview full entry
Reference: CARTER, JOHN, 23 Drummond-street, Carlton, Melbourne.
346 “ Redbreast’s Retreat.”
347 “ Belladonna Lily.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CALVERT SAMUELview full entry
Reference: CALVERT, SAMUEL, Little Collins-street east, Melbourne.
342 “ I’m Ready.”
343 “ Musidora.”
344 “ Light in Shadow.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CURTIS J Wview full entry
Reference: CURTIS, J. W., 53 High-street, Prahran, Melbourne.
348 “On the Road to Wood’s Point.”
349 “ King Parrot Creek, Victoria.”
350 “An Evening Gossip.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
Ford Williamview full entry
Reference: FORD WILLIAM., Clieve Cottage, Inkerman-street, St. Kilda,
Melbourne.
351 “ That Old Eamiliar Air.”
352 “ A Walk in the Garden.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
FOSTER C Wview full entry
Reference: FOSTER, C. W., 31 Collins-street west, Melbourne,
353 “ Lonely Beach.”
354 “ Clearing Out.”

frrom Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
FULLER S Pview full entry
Reference: FULLER, S. P., Danetree Cottage, Balaclava-road, St. Kilda,
Melbourne.
355 “ Apollo and Mounts Bays.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
GIBBES F Bview full entry
Reference: GIBBES, F. B., Secretary Victorian Academy of Arts, Melbourne.
356 “ View in Otago, N.Z.”
357 “ Point Nepean, Port Phillip Heads.”

om Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
MONAH MRSview full entry
Reference: MONAH, MRS., Hawthorn, Melbourne.
358 “ Autumn Fruits.”
359 “ Bird’s Nest.”
360 “ Dead Sparrow.”
om Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
MURCOTT THEOview full entry
Reference: MURCOTT, THEO., 3 Erin-street, North Richmond, Melbourne.
361 “ Limekiln Cove, Devon.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
NELSON J Mview full entry
Reference: NELSON, J. M., 5 Grey-street, East Melbourne.
362 “ Terrace at Warrnambool.”
363 “ Devil’s Elbow, N.S.W.”
364 “ Eldorado, near Beechworth.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
PARSONS MRS GEORGEview full entry
Reference: PARSONS, MRS. GEORGE, Charlwood-road, St. Kilda,
Melbourne.
365 “On the Avon, near Boisdale, Victoria.”
366 “Snipe.”
367 “ View at Boisdale Plains, Victoria.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RICHARDSON C Dview full entry
Reference: RICHARDSON, C, D., Gurner-street, St. Kilda, Melbourne.
868 “ Commissioners’ Creek, Yackandandab.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
REILLY Henryview full entry
Reference: REILLY, Hy., Eastbourne-street, Windsor, Melbourne.
369 “ Homestead.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ROWLAND JOHN ROBERTview full entry
Reference: ROWLAND, JOHN ROBERT, 91 Little Collins-street east,
Melbourne.
871 Incised Enamelling in Opaque and Translucent Enamels.
372 Enamel Painting on Gold, Pine Silver, Sterling Silver, and
Copper.
373 Watch Covers, with Arms, Crests, Monograms, and Cyphers.
374 Discs representing Engine Turning.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ROWAN MRS F Cview full entry
Reference: ROWAN MRS F C., Mount Macedon.
375 “Flowers of Western Australia ”(8 paintings).

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
STOCKS ERNEST Dview full entry
Reference: STOCKS, ERNEST D., Mount Pleasant, Ballarat.
376 “ Repose.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
TURNER CHARLESview full entry
Reference: TURNER CHARLES, Swanston-street, Melbourne.
377 u You Yangs, Victoria.’
378 “ A Private Seance.”
379 “On the Yarra.”
380 “ All among the Barley.”
ULM, EMILE, 12 High-street, Prabran, Melbourne.
381 “ The Pour Seasons.”
382 “ Fruits.”
383 “ Doves.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
USHER WILLIAM HENRYview full entry
Reference: USHER WILLIAM HENEY, 89 Little Collins-street East,
Melbourne.
384 Heraldic Specimens in Water Colour.from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
ULM EMILEview full entry
Reference: ULM EMILE, 12 High-street, Prabran, Melbourne.
381 “ The Pour Seasons.”
382 “ Fruits.”
383 “ Doves.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
WOODHOUSE H Jview full entry
Reference: WOODHOUSE, H. J., Yictoria-street, Carlton, Melbourne.
385 “ Going to Eest.”
386 “ The Last Match.”
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
BRYANT EDWINview full entry
Reference: BRYANT, EDWIN, Osborne-street, South Yarra, Melbourne.
PENCIL DRAWINGS.
387 '* Warwick Castle.”
388 “ The Village Waits.”
389 “ Even Song.”
390 « Auld Garth Bridge” (Nithsdale).
891 “ A Study of Dogs.”
392 u Eishing Smacks.”

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RIDER EDMUND THOMASview full entry
Reference: RIDER, EDMUND THOMAS, Dawson-street, Ballarat.
Chalk Drawing, on stone.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
SMITH BERNHARDview full entry
Reference: SMITH, BERNHARD, Mansfield.
Drawings in Outline (4).
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CASELLI, HENRY RICHARD Architectview full entry
Reference: CASELLI, HENRY RICHARD, Architect, Ballarat.
Copperplate Engraving, “ Boar Hunt; ” engraved in 1760 by
W. Woollett.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
TWENTYMAN G O & Sonview full entry
Reference: TWENTYMAN, G. 0., & SON, Regent-street, North Richmond,
Melbourne.
Impressions in Wax from Seal Engravings on Gems and
Metals.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CALVERT SAMUELview full entry
Reference: CALVERT, SAMUEL, Little Collins-street east, Melbourne.
Proof Impression of Engraving of Picture by Buvelot.
Class 413.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
NIVEN F Wview full entry
Reference: NIVEN, F. W., Hunt-street, Ballarat.
Lithograph Hand-work.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
TURNER CHARLESview full entry
Reference: TURNER, CHARLES, 83 Swanston-street, Melbourne.
Lithographs, Portraits.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Engraving’ and Lithography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
BATH THOMASview full entry
Reference: BATH, THOMAS, Ceres, near Ballarat.
Photograph of Lincoln Sheep (with samples of their wool in
the frame).
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Photography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CAIRE NICHOLAS JOHNview full entry
Reference: CAIRE, NICHOLAS JOHN, 139 Bourke-street, Melbourne.
Photographs of Yictorian Scenery.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Photography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
JOHNSTONE, O’SHANNESSY & COview full entry
Reference: JOHNSTONE, O’SHANNESSY & CO., 3 Bourke-street east,
Melbourne.
Specimens of Photography.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Photography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
O’SHANNESSY & CO JOHNSTONE, O’SHANNESSY & CO view full entry
Reference: see JOHNSTONE, O’SHANNESSY & CO., 3 Bourke-street east,
Melbourne.
Specimens of Photography.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Photography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
NETTLETON CHARLESview full entry
Reference: NETTLETON, CHARLES, 19 Madeline-street, Carlton, Melbourne.
Photographic Yiews.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879. Photography.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
CASELLI HENRY RICHARDS architectview full entry
Reference: CASELLI, HENRY RICHARDS, Architect, Ballarat.
411 Elevation of Proposed Free Library and Beading Booms at
Ballarat.

from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
RASCHE W architectview full entry
Reference: RASCHE, W. (C.E.), 55 Elizabeth-street, Melbourne.
412 Architectural Design.
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp
MURPHY EDWARD architectview full entry
Reference: MURPHY, EDWARD, Sandridge-road, Emerald Hill, Melbourne.
413 Ceiling Centreflower, in Plaster-of-Paris.
414 Ventilating Flower, in connection with Murphy’s Patent
Ventilator (see Department II.)
from Sydney International Exhibition, Victorian Court 1879. Official Catalogue of Exhibits of the Sydney International Exhibition 1879.
Publishing details: Printed for the Commissioners by Walker, May & Co., 9 Mackillop Street [Melbourne]. 1879, 74pp


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