artresearch.com.au

The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

Search or browse the Index to locate biographical information
on Australian artists more details»


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

First | Previous | Record 60,801 – 61,800 of 1,000

Bell Ronald Cview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Chapman Doraview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Dowie Johnview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Dallwitz Davidview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Francis Ivorview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Gemmell Nancyview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Hele Ivorview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Hick Jacquelineview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Hann Marjoryview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Hall Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Hay Fraserview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Lee Lornaview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Miller Shirleyview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Offler Connieview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Parham Mayview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Riebe Antonview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Roberts Ainslieview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Roberts Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Stoward Cliveview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Schlank Cliveview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Shedley Maryview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Smith Vanessaview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Spencer Elsieview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Tuck Ruthview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Welsh John (London)view full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Wood Rexview full entry
Reference: see Tuck Marie - A Centenary Tribute Exhibition by the Students of Marie Tuck 1872-1947. The works (with titles and prices) of 28 artists who were students of Marie Tuck are listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: venue not recorded in catalogue (presumably Adelaide), Feb 1972
Tuck Marieview full entry
Reference: Marie Tuck Memorial Exhibition. 21 untitled monotypes listed, 88 oils with titles and prices listed. No biographical information.
Publishing details: Royal South Australian Society of Arts, 1947, North Terrace, Adelaide. Photocopy.
Ref: 128
Tuck Marieview full entry
Reference: Catalogue - Marie Tuck. Exhibition catalogue from Cricklewood Arts Centre Workshop. Includes brief tribute by John Dowie. 37 works listed with titles and prices.
Publishing details: Cricklewood Arts Centre Workshop, Aldgate, South Australia, nd (1971?)
Ref: 128
Nikulinsky Philippaview full entry
Reference: Firewood Banksia by Philippa Nikulinsky [’A dazzling and wondrous celebration of Banksia menziesii (Firewood or Menzies’ Banksia) by one of Australia’s best botanical artists. After many field trips and long observation of the species, Philippa Nikulinsky has created a series of detailed drawings and paintings that record this banksia and its cycle in all their beauty.’]
Publishing details: 2014
Edition
2nd
Publisher
Fremantle Press, 2014,
Hardback, Illustrated
Pages: .56
Ref: 1000
Nikulinsky Philippaview full entry
Reference: Banksia menziesii by Philippa Nikulinsky

Publishing details: South Fremantle, W.A. : Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1992, [49] p. : col. ill., 1 col. port. ; 27 cm. 
Ref: 1000
Piccinini Patriciaview full entry
Reference: Patricia Piccinini Colouring-in book 

Publishing details: Large format, 32 pages. Full colour images printed alongside line illustrations.


Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Objects from the Dreaming: Aboriginal decorated and woven objects, by
Christopher Menz (1996)

Publishing details: AGSA, 1996, paperback
16 pp, 15 colour illus.
Ref: 1000
Heartlandview full entry
Reference: Heartland: Contemporary Art From South Australia by Nici Cumpston & Lisa Slade. Catalogue includes essay on each artist. [’Delve deeper into HEARTLAND with the exhibition publication. It combines beautiful images from the exhibition with photographs of artists working in their studios and insightful essays written by the Curators and other esteemed authors.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia(distributed through Thames & Hudson), Paperback, 80 pages, 58 colour illustrations

silver Australian view full entry
Reference: see Bounty: Nineteenth-century South Australian gold and silver by Robert Reason

[’Bounty: Nineteenth-century South Australian gold and silver celebrates the creativity and tenacity of South Australia’s colonial artisans, including John Pace, C.E. Firnhaber, Julius Schomburgk, Henry Steiner and J.M. Wendt. This handsome volume examines different aspects of nineteenth-century society through such items as the communion silver used in churches, the 1885 Adelaide gold pound, Friendly Society medallions, civic ceremonial regalia and presentation objects for important citizens and sporting events.’]
Publishing details: Silver vinyl hardback, 300 x 248 mm, 132 pages, full colour throughout, 204 illustrations

Hamilton Antony view full entry
Reference: Antony Hamilton: The Mythology of Landscape by Sarah Thomas (1999)

Publishing details: AGSA, 1999, paperback
32 pp, 9 colour illus., 6 b&w illus.
Ref: 1000
Bountyview full entry
Reference: Bounty: Nineteenth-century South Australian gold and silver by Robert Reason

[’Bounty: Nineteenth-century South Australian gold and silver celebrates the creativity and tenacity of South Australia’s colonial artisans, including John Pace, C.E. Firnhaber, Julius Schomburgk, Henry Steiner and J.M. Wendt. This handsome volume examines different aspects of nineteenth-century society through such items as the communion silver used in churches, the 1885 Adelaide gold pound, Friendly Society medallions, civic ceremonial regalia and presentation objects for important citizens and sporting events.’]
Publishing details: Silver vinyl hardback, 300 x 248 mm, 132 pages, full colour throughout, 204 illustrations

Ref: 1000
animals in Australian artview full entry
Reference: Animals: Colouring book

[’Take your children on a journey of colour and wonder and learn about works of art in the collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia. Animals, available now, is the second in a series of colouring books. Line illustrations are shown alongside reproductions of works of art and simple text focuses the child¹s attention on aspects of the paintings.’]
Publishing details: AGSA, ISBN:978 1 921668 029
32pp,17 colour illust, 17 line illust
Ref: 1000
Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art 2014view full entry
Reference: 2014 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Dark Heart
Curator: Nick Mitzevich

[’This lavishly illustrated, full-colour book presents the compelling visions of some of Australia's leading contemporary artists. The issues and ideas explored by the artists and the authors include intercultural relationships, our ecological fate, gender and political power.’]
Publishing details: Hardcover, 320 x 248 mm, 224 pages, 225 illustrations
ISBN 978-1-921668-17-3
Ref: 1000
Highlights: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collection: Art Gallery of South Australiaview full entry
Reference: Highlights: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collection: Art Gallery of South Australia by Nici Cumpston

Principally a picture book, this publication showcases works by artists from across Australia. It gives a broad introduction to the extraordinary diversity and breadth of the Art Gallery of South Australia’s collection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art.
Publishing details: AGSA, Hardcover, 320 x 245 mm, 80 pages, 102 illustrations

Ref: 1000
Meek James McKainview full entry
Reference: The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Grant George after James Meek p7, 11, 12, 54, 56view full entry
Reference: see Meek James McKain - The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Sharp William p 54view full entry
Reference: see Meek James McKain - The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Cancahi p 54view full entry
Reference: see Meek James McKain - The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Cunningham T E p62view full entry
Reference: see Meek James McKain - The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Leviny Ernest silversmith 62view full entry
Reference: see Meek James McKain - The Inimitable Mr Meek, by Joan Luxemburg. Catalogue of the Art Gallery of Ballarat

[’James McKain Meek was one of nineteenth-century Australia's great eccentrics.

Arriving in the colonies in the 1830s, he ran a sly grog operation on the Ballarat goldfields, set up a cured fish business at Warrnambool, and managed a spa resort in New Zealand, but he is memorable today for the enormous, intricate drawings he produced throughout his career.
A skilled draughtsman, he delighted in exercising his skill in miniature penmanship to produce a series of massive commemorative wall hangings and tables, celebrating aspects of local or colonial history or the achievements of particular families. He turned the production of printed versions of these drawings into a business operation, with varying success.

This exhibition is curated by Joan Luxemburg, who is writing a PhD thesis on the life and work of this fascinating artist, and is accompanied by an illustrated scholarly catalogue.’]
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2015, pb, 88ppwith index.
Australian Botanical Art view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto,dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations.
Becker Ludwigview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto,dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations.
Mueller Ferdinand essayview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Ladd & Carr printerview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Drake Sarah Annview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Walker Anna Francesview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Moon Henry Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Barley Anitaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Lemaire Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Nodder E Pview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Parkinson Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Banks Joseph patronview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Miller James view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Curtis Johnview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Smith James Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Sowerby Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Cavanilles Antonioview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Redoute Pierre-Joseph [Belgium]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Turpin Pierre [France]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Bauer Fredinand Lucasview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Lewin John Williamview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Gould William Buelowview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Henry Aime [France]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
de Saint Vincent Jean-Baptiste Bory view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Borromeeview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Edwards Sydenham [Wales]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Andrews Henryview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Rothig Karlview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Loddiges George [English]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Hooker William Jackson [English]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Smith Edwin Dalton [English]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Fitch Walter [Scotland]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Holden Samuel [England]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Hart J [England]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Schoenfeld Frederick [Switzerland]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Todt Emil view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Rowan Ellisview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Hartinger Anton [Austria]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Shepherd Richardview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Rummel Ludwig lithographerview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Graff Robertview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Smith Hebert B [England]view full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Staiger Karl Theodoreview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Hope Margaret Aview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Minchen Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Fitzgerald Robert Dview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Fiveash Rosaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Loudon Janeview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Withers Augustaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Drake Sarahview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Maund Sarahview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Twining Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Bisdee Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Meredith Louisa Anneview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Boyd Emma Minnieview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
De Mole Fannyview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Charsley Fanny Anneview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Walker Annaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Blyth Elizaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Flockton Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Stones Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Nicholls W Hview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Mort Eireneview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Grimwade Russell photographerview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Prenzel Robertview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Kelly Stanview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Conabere Bettyview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Jones Paulview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Rosser Celiaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Phillips Jennyview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Barley Anitaview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Moir Maliview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Emery Dianneview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Black Laurenview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Dennis Jeanview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Cooper Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Seward Andrewview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Pastoriza-Pinol Johnview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Mayo Robynview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Mayo Robynview full entry
Reference: see Capturing Flora: 300 Years of Australian Botanical Art [Published to coincide with the "Capturing flora" exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 September to 2 December 2012. Five essays explore the way Australia's flora has been captured and celebrated by artists for over 300 years. This lavishly illustrated book features sketches, drawings, watercolours and prints of Australian native plants from artists such as Pierre-Joseph Redoute, Ferdinand Lucas Bauer, Henry Andrews and Ellis Rowan].
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2012. Quarto, hc, dustwrapper, 287 pp., colour illustrations. With bibliography and index.
Mercier Emileview full entry
Reference: My Wife Swallowed a Bishop
Publishing details: Angus & Robertson, (c1950s), pb, 128pp
Ref: 1000
Australian Potteryview full entry
Reference: Notes for Potters in Australia by Ivan McMeekin, vol 1, (vol 2?) [Provides advice from Australian potters)
Publishing details: University of NSW Press, 1967, 205 pp.
Ref: 1000
Australianaview full entry
Reference: Australiana Booksellers’ Catalogues by D. A. Spalding
Publishing details: the author, 1994, 200 copies
Ref: 1000
Patterson Ambrose p47-63view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
McCubbin Louis p129-139view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
Dyson Will p161-177view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
Heidelberg school p73-81view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
Meldrum Max p99-107view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
McCubbin Sheila 3 illustrations p96view full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
McCubbin familyview full entry
Reference: see McCubbin Frederick - Autumn Memories - A McCubbin Family Album by Kathleen Mangan
Publishing details: Georgian House, Melbourne, 1988, hc, dw, 204pp
Carswell Alanview full entry
Reference: Irish born convict-artist Alan Carswell produced A view of Hobart Town by (1823), showing the colony establishing itself around the mouth of Sullivans Cove in the early 1820s. [from History of Hobart on Wikipedia]
Cohn Olaview full entry
Reference: A way with the fairies: the lost story of sculptor Ola Cohn - An autobiography edited by Barbara Lemon


Historian Dr Barbara Lemon was awarded a Creative Fellowship in 2010 to transcribe and edit Ola Cohn’s original unpublished autobiographical manuscript, now published in this book.
Ola Cohn was a pioneer of modernist sculpture in Australia and her Fairies’ Tree in Melbourne’s Fitzroy Gardens has delighted generations of children.
Publishing details: Publisher: RW Strugnell with assistance from State Library Victoria, 2014

Australia through women's eyesview full entry
Reference: Australia through women's eyes, by Ann Standish. Includes index. Bibliography: p. 274-292. Some biographical information included.

[’When Louisa Meredith arrived in Van Diemen's land in 1841 after living in NSW, she was struck by how much the colony resembled her homeland. Finding signs of home in both the landscape and social life of the colonies is a theme that recurs in writings of female colonists But in these writings it becomes evident that they must be "white"...’]

[’Historian Ann Standish provides a glimpse into colonial Australia, as observed by women writers of the day. Utilising Library collections Standish provides insight into 19th-century British emigrants as diverse as Louisa Meredith, Marianne North, Beatrice Webb and others who travelled to the Australian colonies and recorded their thoughts on what they found there.’]
Publishing details: Australian Scholarly Publishing in association with the State Library of Victoria, 2008, pb, viii, 336 p., [12] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps, ports. Signed copy with inscription by author.
Australian botanical artistsview full entry
Reference: Botanical riches: stories of botanical exploration by Richard Aitken. Part !!! Chapter 18 is titled ‘New Holland and the South Pacific’

A Creative Fellow in 2004, Australian historian Richard Aitken traces the gradual realisation of the potential of plants for medicinal, nutritional, flavouring and decorative purposes across history. Magnificently illustrated with some of the world's most glorious engraved, lithographed and hand-coloured botanical illustrations, Botanical riches is a colourful history filled with enthralling tales of botanical exploration.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library Victoria, 2006, 244pp with index, select bibliography, list of illustrations and notes on sources..
Australian children’s booksview full entry
Reference: Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

State Library of Victoriaview full entry
Reference: Author: Harriet Edquist
Price: Free
Publisher: State Library Victoria
Format: ebook
For the young colony of Victoria, the 1850s was a time of optimism and hunger for social change. One of the era's grandest innovations was the building of Australia’s first public library.
The Melbourne Public Library (as it was then known) was envisaged as a pantheon of the world’s knowledge, open to any citizen over the age of 14 – provided they had clean hands – and offering free access to self-education unmatched by any other public institution in the nation.
This colourful tale of a century of institutional and architectural reform provides a fascinating insight into the development of Melbourne as Australia’s cultural capital.
Harriet Edquist is Professor of Architectural History and Director of the RMIT Design Archives at RMIT University, Melbourne.
Ref: 1000
Burke and Willsview full entry
Reference: Burke and Wills: the scientific legacy of the Victorian exploring expedition by E. B. Joyce and DA McCann [to be indexed]

‘This book challenges the common assumption that nothing of scientific value was achieved during the Burke and Wills expedition. Drawing on paintings, diaries and other documents held in the Library's collections, it details the scientific achievements of this ultimately doomed journey to the centre of Australia.’
Publishing details: Publisher: CSIRO in association with State Library Victoria
Available to read in the Library
Ref: 1009
Typographyview full entry
Reference: Characters: cultural stories through typography by Stephen Banham & Rick Poynor

Melbourne typographer and 2011 Creative Fellow Stephen Banham explores how type and signage are a rich form of cultural expression.
Using many of the Library's collections, Banham has meticulously researched Melbourne’s most iconic signage and typography to present an exuberant collection of quirky, poignant and often funny stories.
Publishing details: Publisher: Thames & Hudson in association with State Library Victoria

Ref: 1000
Gilbert George Alexanderview full entry
Reference: Cultured colonists George Alexander Gilbert and his family, settlers in Port Phillip, by Margaret Bowman AO. [’Teacher, artist and founder of the city's first art school, English immigrant George Gilbert played a significant role in advancing visual arts in Melbourne.
Margaret Bowman AO researched the book as part of a Creative Fellowship in 2011, drawing on the rich resources of the Library to explore Gilbert's life and reproduce his landscape artworks.’]

Teacher, artist and founder of the city's first art school, English immigrant George Gilbert played a significant role in advancing visual arts in Melbourne.
Margaret Bowman AO researched the book as part of a Creative Fellowship in 2011, drawing on the rich resources of the Library to explore Gilbert's life and reproduce his landscape artworks.
Publishing details: Publisher: Australian Scholarly Publishing in association with the Athenaeum Library and State Library Victoria

Clark J J view full entry
Reference: J J Clark: architect of the Australian Renaissance by Andrew Dodd

Author Andrew Dodd worked on this biography of architect John James Clark as the Redmond Barry Fellow in 2009.
Aged just 19 when he designed the Melbourne Treasury, Clark went on to design Melbourne’s Government House, City Baths and Royal Mint, along with many other iconic Australian buildings.
This fascinating biography reveals the inspiration and drama of a man described as Australia’s greatest architect, and contains original plans, elevations and previously unpublished sketches from Library collections.
Publishing details: Publisher: NewSouth Publishing in association with State Library Victoria

Ref: 1000
Gill Samuel Thomasview full entry
Reference: S T Gill and his Audiences by Sasha Grishin. Extensively illustrated. With bibliography.

[’Samuel Thomas Gill, or STG as he was universally known, was Australia’s most significant and popular artist of the mid-19th century. He worked in South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales, and left some of the most memorable images of urban and rural life in colonial Australia.
The first major comprehensive book to be devoted to Gill, this work reproduces some of the most startling images from 19th-century Australian art.
The whole gamut of colonial life is found in Gill’s watercolours and prints. There are personalities such as the 'unlucky digger', the 'gold buyer' and the squatter who is 'monarch of all he surveys'. Historic locations, geological landmarks and notable occasions are also captured, such as the first cricket match between New South Wales and Victoria in 1857, and the departure of Sturt’s overland expedition.
Author Sasha Grishin is the curator of our 2015 exhibition, Australian sketchbook: Colonial life and the art of ST Gill, on display in the Library's Keith Murdoch Gallery from 17 July to 25 October 2015.
About the author
Sasha Grishin is an Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University, where he established the academic discipline of Art History and was the Sir William Dobell Professor of Art History and Head of Art History and Curatorship until 2013. He works internationally as an art historian, art critic and curator, and has published more than 25 books.’]
Publishing details: Publisher: National Library of Australia in association with State Library Victoria, 2015, hc, no dw as issued, 255pp with index.

Cowen Gallery Catalogueview full entry
Reference: The Cowen Gallery Catalogue by Michael D Galimany. Includes some biographical information on each of approximately 90 artists, with one colour illustration for each.

Originally built as the Stawell Gallery in 1892 for the National Gallery of Victoria, and subsequently used by the National Museum, the Cowen Gallery was renovated and reopened to the public in November 2003. It houses a permanent exhibition of 150 paintings and sculptures from the State Library of Victoria's Pictures Collection, the oldest visual documentary collection in Australia.
Author Michael D Galimany was the first curator of the Cowen Gallery, and worked at the Library for 13 years.
Publishing details: Publisher: State Library Victoria, 2006, 172 pp with index of artists and index of portraits
Heideview full entry
Reference: see Sunday’s Garden - Growing Heide by Lesley Harding and Kendrah Morgan
[to be indexed]
Sunday’s garden explores how Sunday and John Reed transformed a once-neglected former dairy farm in Heidelberg into a lush artist’s colony teeming with life.
Edited by Lesley Harding and Kendrah Morgan, both curators at Heide Museum of Modern Art, the book was researched using many of the Library's collections.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with Heide Museum of Modern Art and State Library Victoria
Available to read in the Library
Sunday and John Reedview full entry
Reference: see Heide - Sunday’s Garden - Growing Heide by Lesley Harding and Kendrah Morgan

Sunday’s garden explores how Sunday and John Reed transformed a once-neglected former dairy farm in Heidelberg into a lush artist’s colony teeming with life.
Edited by Lesley Harding and Kendrah Morgan, both curators at Heide Museum of Modern Art, the book was researched using many of the Library's collections.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with Heide Museum of Modern Art and State Library Victoria
Available to read in the Library
La Trobe Journalview full entry
Reference: The La Trobe Journal is a scholarly publication produced by State Library Victoria with support from State Library Victoria fundraising. First published in April 1968, the journal features articles written by researchers who have drawn on the Library’s rich and varied collections as source material. [To be indexed for articles on Australian art and artists].
Already indexed:
Vol 13, no. 54, March, 1995
No 88, Dec. 2011
Publishing details: State Library of Victoria Foundation, 1968-
Ref: 140
Trenerry Horace Hurtleview full entry
Reference: A listing of Trenerry paintings exhibited in the SASA Winter 1923, Federal 1923, Spring 1924, Autumn 1924 exhibitions. (Approximately 20 titles)

Publishing details: (photocopy)
Ref: 123
Stokes Constanceview full entry
Reference: Constance Stokes by Ronald Cohn Jesse Russell [A print on demand book - In English language. ‘High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Constance Stokes (born Constance Parkin, 1906-1991) was an Australian painter, described as "a leading figure in the modernist movement in Victoria". Although she painted few works in the 1930s, her paintings and drawings were exhibited from the 1940s onwards. She was one of only two women, and two Victorians, included in a major exhibition of twelve Australian artists that travelled to Canada, the United Kingdom and Venice in the early 1950s.’]

Publishing details: TRANSMEDIA HOLDING, United States Softcover, ISBN 5508499997
Publisher: Book on Demand, Miami, 2015
Ref: 1009
Turbitt Henry or Turbit or Turbettview full entry
Reference: see SLNSW: Henry Turbit, (i.e. Turbitt or Turbett
Aboriginal portraits by Henry Turbit, ca. 1820-1830s ;
Call Number PXA 1033
4 drawings in SLNSW

Henry Turbit, (i.e. Turbitt or Turbett) is probably Henry Turbett (b. 1799) who was sentenced at Middlesex for seven years in 1815. Turbett arrived in Sydney on the Mariner in 1816. He was employed as a carpenter in the 1820s and eventually moved into hotels, having the licence in the 1830s to the Carpenters Arms, in Sussex Street. These are the only drawings known of his. -- ML 04/703
Contents
1. Frying Pan / Drawn by Hy Turbit. Watercolour and pencil. 26 x 21 cm. Full-length profile portrait showing Frying Pan wrapped in a blanket wearing a gorget or breastplate.
2. Gooseberry. Watercolour and pencil. 26 x 21 cm. Full-length profile portrait of Gooseberry with blanket draped across one shoulder, holding a stick and bottle.
3. [Untitled Aboriginal male portrait]. Watercolour and pencil. 24.4 x 20.2 cm. Three quarter length portrait showing an Aboriginal man holding a boomerang, draped with a blanket and a pipe through his nose. Includes a profile head and shoulders pencil sketch of a European woman inset at upper right.
4. [European female portrait, 1824. Artist unknown]. Pencil drawing. 19.6 x 13.9 cm. Three quarter length portrait of a young woman sitting in a chair holding a book. Purchased Christie's (Sydney) Sale, 23-24 Aug 2004, Lot 95. From the private collection of Stephen Scheding.

No.1 "Frying Pan / Drawn by Hy Turbit" -- at lower edge of drawing. The inscription has been defined by ink in a later hand and "Sydney" added.
No.2 "Gooseberry" -- at lower edge of drawing.
No.4 "Godby 46 Middlesex Street / Somers Town [?]/ April 28 1824" -- in pencil on reverse

The Aboriginal portraits probably date from the 1820s or 1830s and are unusual because few European colonists of that period involved themselves with Aboriginal portraiture. The majority of images of Aboriginal people available in Sydney during these decades were published. Gooseberry (d.1852), the wife of Bungaree (d.1830), was known as 'Queen of Sydney to South Head' or 'Queen of Sydney and Botany' and was a Sydney identity for years after her husband's death. She was often seen wrapped in a government issued blanket, her head covered with a scarf and a clay pipe in her mouth, sitting with her family and other Aborigines camped on the footpath outside the Cricketers' Arms, on the corner of Pitt and Market Streets. She was the subject of a number of prints. Augustus Earle showed her sitting at the feet of Bungaree in his 1830 lithograph Bungaree a native chief of New South Wales (Views in New South Wales and Van Diemens Land, 1830), while Charles Rodius included her in his lithograph Biddy Salmander / Broken Bay Tribe [&] Bulkabra / Chief of Botany, / N.S. Wales [&] Gooseberry / Queen of Bungaree (SV*/Sp Coll/Rodius/3). None of these images, however, appears to be the source of Turbit's Gooseberry -- Curator's notes, Aug 2004. It is possible that `Frying Pan' was from the Illawarra region. Thirty rugs/blankets were issued at Wollongong in 1829 and `Frying Pan' was included in the listing. Reference: Illawarra and South Coast aborigines, 1770-1900 / compiled by Michael Organ ; with assistance from Jim Smith...[et al.]. Wollongong, N.S.W. : M. Organ, 1993. pp.66-7


Australian architectureview full entry
Reference: Demolished Houses of Sydney by Joy Hughes. Illustrated throughout with b/w photographs
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of NSW, 1999. Soft covers, quarto.
Ref: 1000
Australian Personal Bookplatesview full entry
Reference: Australian Personal Bookplates. By Andrew Peake. Includes index of Australian bookplate artists who are listed in the book.- over 1000 artists listed [To be indexed]. The bookplates are arranged by the owners of the bookplates listed in alphabetical order.. Includes bibliography. Includes 4 essays. Lists collections of bookplates in Australia. Includes biographical entries for about 40 artists [these have been entered in the Scheding Index]
Publishing details: Tudor Australia Press, 2000. First ordinary edition. Blue cloth, quarto. signed by author on title page
Brogan John Rview full entry
Reference: 101 Australian Homes. Designs by John R Brogan. Illustrated throughout with plans.
Publishing details: Sydney: Building Publishing, ND circa 1950s. Soft covers, quarto. Very scarce.
Ref: 1000
homes - design architectureview full entry
Reference: see Brogan John R - 101 Australian Homes. Designs by John R Brogan. Illustrated throughout with plans.
Publishing details: Sydney: Building Publishing, ND circa 1950s. Soft covers, quarto. Very scarce.
Wilson William Hardyview full entry
Reference: The Cow Pasture Road written and illustrated by Hardy Wilson.
Publishing details: Art in Australia, 1920. Limited Edition. Book was published in limited number of 600 copies but only 500 for sale. Hardcover, sm 4to., fair condition, papered illus., boards with some marks & wear to spine, large bookplate fep, colour tipped-in frontis, 11 colour tipped-in plates in text., 70pp. (A deluxe edition of 25 also published)
Ref: 1000
Australian War Photographsview full entry
Reference: Australian War Photographs A Pictorial Record from November 1917 to the End of the War. Edited by Captain Geo H Wilkins. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Published by A.I.F 1919.
Ref: 1000
Australian Postersview full entry
Reference: Swann Auction Galleries, catalogue, Platinum House, August 5, 2015, New York, NY, USA. Catalogue included an extensive number of posters relating to Australia and by Australian artists
Publishing details: Swann, 2015
Ref: 1000
Allen Joyce 1916 - 1992view full entry
Reference: from DAAO: Joyce L. McC Allen
Also known as:
Joyce L. McC Isles
Joyce Allen
Art teacher (ANZSIC code: 8022)

Birth place
Brisbane, Qld.
Death date
30 July 1992
Death place
Bowral, NSW
Active Period
• c.1940-c.1991
Residence
• 1970-1992 Bowral, NSW
• c.1939-c.1970 Sydney, NSW
• c.1916-c.1939 Brisbane, Qld.

Publishing details: SBFA, 1986
Duterrau Benjamin Conciliation etchingview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Hunt Charles Henryview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Geach Portiaview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Sainthill Loudon view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Abbott Haroldview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Fleischmann Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings, Prints and Sculpture, catalogue, September 1986. Includes biographical information. 18 works all illustrated. Susannah and elders - major terracotta.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Staniland Charles Josephview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Staniland was British but painted this Tasmanian scene in 1895 from a photograph by Ash of Hobart.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Ash of Hobartview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes work by Staniland who was British but painted this Tasmanian scene in 1895 from a photograph by Ash of Hobart.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Webb George Alfred Johnview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes work by Webb of Cora Lynn, Tasmania.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Webb George Alfred Johnview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes work by Webb of Cora Lynn, Tasmania.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Crisp James Aview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes work by Crisp titled The Skater, 1906
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Collingridge Georgeview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated.

Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Jones Charles Lloydview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes major work by Jones of a ferry wharf ic1900.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Hilder Jesse Jewhurstview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes a rare oil by Hilder titled A Sunlit Hill Hawkesbury 1913.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints , catalogue, September 1985. Includes biographical information. 11 works each illustrated. Includes a rare oil by Hilder titled Gondolas 1958.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, December, 1985, 8-page folding card
Ironside Adelaideview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Martens Rebeccaview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Hadley H Cview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Jones Charles Lloyd view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated. Oil by Jones 1906.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Longstaff Johnview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Watkins John Samuelview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Nillet Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Baker Christina Asquithview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Gibbons Henry Cornwallisview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Lewis Martinview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - Fine Australian Colonial, Impressionist, Edwardian and Modern Paintings and Prints, catalogue, May 1987. Includes biographical information. 27 works each illustrated.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, April, 1987, 16pp
Tait Bess Norris view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. Watercolour portrait exhibited NGV 1925.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Sheldon Pearlview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. Sheldon exhibited at the RA and Paris Salon in the 1920s.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Bleach George Wview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. A pair of Marine watercolours, off Sydney Heads. 1011.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Newman Annie Cview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. Oil, he Inlet, c1910
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Hinkis Alexandreview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. Hinkis was a French artist many of whose paintings found their way to Australia although no Australian subjects are known.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Puech Mview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. A Nocturne, 1912. exhibited Royal Art Society.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Roxburgh Rachel (b. 1915 Australia d.1991) view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - End of Year Sale, all works under $1000. 51 exhibits. Thames near Kew, oil, 46 x 57 cm.
Publishing details: Xmas 1986
Gleeson James 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Strachan Davidview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Family Group, 1938.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Power James Wardellview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Lawler Adrianview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Boles Bernard 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Friend Donald 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Feint Adrian view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Study for Happy Landing.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
lo Schiavo Virgilview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
McQueen Kennethview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Steuart Ronald 4 worksview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Dangerfield Elsieview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art - A Surrealist View. Catalogue April 1986 Includes biographical information. 26 exhibits, illustrated in b & w.
Publishing details: Scheding Berry Fine Art, 1986, 16pp
Scheding Berry Fine Artview full entry
Reference: Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information.
Publishing details: December, 1985, small format
Ref: 74
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. In the Domain, Sydney, c1887.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. In the Domain, Sydney, c1887.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Hern Charles Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. Katoomba Falls, 1881, watercolour, exh ASNSW.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Honey Winifredview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. Lady in Grey, oil, 166.4 x 66.6 cm.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Woolner Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. The arist’s wife, plaster plaque,
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Hamilton George and S T Gillview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. Set of 10 lithographs.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Garlick Henry Glebeview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. Ploughing, Richmond, 1905.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Dattilo-Rubbo Anthony view full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. College Street Sydney, c1917.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Moore John Dview full entry
Reference: see Scheding Berry Fine Art Exhibition catalogue, 11 exhibits, illustrated in b & w. Includes biographical information. Free Speech, the Domain, Sydney.
Publishing details: September, 1985, small format
Gibbs Audrey 1921 - 2015view full entry
Reference: extensive obituary in Sydney Morning Herald 28 July, 2015, p38. Queensland artist. Exhibitor in numerous Queensland art societies.
Ref: 133
Swann Heather Bview full entry
Reference: see Artonview, Winter 2015 article by Sarina Noordhuis-Fairfax.
Newsome Marcview full entry
Reference: see Artonview, Winter 2015 article by Robert Bell
Roberts Tom The Artist’s Studioview full entry
Reference: see Artonview, Winter 2015 article by David Wise on the conservation of the painting
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: see Artonview, Winter 2015 article by Deborah Hart on ‘The Nine Shots’ by Tillers
Nicholas Hilda Rixview full entry
Reference: see Artonview, Winter 2015 article by Anne Gray on ‘Une Australienne’
Lee Lindyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine August 2015 article ‘The art that made me’ by Lindy Lee
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine July 2015, 2-page article ‘by Joyce Morgan ‘Colour as Energy’
Strutt Williamview full entry
Reference: Heroes and Villains - Strutt’s Australia. Exhibition.
Publishing details: NLA, 2015, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1009
Wright William (Bill) 1937-2014view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine February 2015, 2-page obituary by Anthony Bond
Campbell Cressidaview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine June 2015 article ‘The art that made me’
Binns Vivienneview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine February 2015, ‘Reflections on the Mind of Vivienne Binns’
Fox Ethel Carrick and E Phillipsview full entry
Reference: E. PHILLIPS FOX, and ETHEL CARRICK, Catalogue for the 1997, Exhibition at The DEUTSCHER FINE ART GALLERY in Melbourne. Catalogue has many Illustrations of both Artists’ paintings, and an introduction by David Thomas.
Publishing details: DEUTSCHER FINE ART GALLERY, 1997, card cover, and 63 Pages
Annandale Imitation Realistsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Antipodeans and Manifestoview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Bellette Jean 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Blackman Charles 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Boyd Arthur 14 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Daws Lawrence 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dobell William 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dridan David 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Drysdale Russell 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Firth-Smith John 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Flower Cedricview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Friend Donald 9 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
French Leonard 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gallery Aview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gibbons Henry Cornwallis 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gleeson James 11 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Haefliger Paul 11 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hessing Leonard 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hjorth Noela 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hodgkinson Frank 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hughes Robert 20 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Klippel Robert 14 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Lanceley Colin 13 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
McDonald Frank art dealer 15 refs view full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
McDonald Frank art dealer 15 refs view full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
McGrath Sandra art critic 9 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Miller Godfrey 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Palmer Maudie 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Passmore John 30 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Perceval John 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Pugh Clifton 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Upward Peter 18 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Warren Guy 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Whiteley Brett 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Williams Fred 14 refsview full entry
Reference: see Olsen John - John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitionsa and index [’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Niland Kilmenyview full entry
Reference: see exhibition at Artarmon Gallery, August 2015. Officially launched by Rafe Champion: ‘Rafe shared Kilmeny’s life from the 1970s to 2009.  During that time they had four multi-talented sons, cherished assorted cats and a dog and, as well, composed newsletters for many clubs and societies including the long-standing  Miniature Art Association.  Rafe will give some insights into Kilmeny’s creativity, her tireless productivity and her amazing versatility.
 
All Kilmeny’s work on view is the original artwork either from her publications
or from her studio including miniatures, watercolours, oil paintings and limited
edition etchings with a few experimental digital prints...’

Turbitt Henry or Turbit or Turbettview full entry
Reference: three watercolour drawings by Turbett of Aborigines are in the SLNSW. These were from the collection of Stephen Scheding. A descendent of Henry Turbett, (i.e. Turbit or Turbitt or Turbett ) contacted Stephen Scheding in July 2015 and later posted 10 pages of biographical notes. In short: Turbett born London 1796; became a cabinet maker; charged with larceny 1815; transported to Sydney; 1837 acquired a hotel calling it the Carpenter’s Arms; died 1840.
Ref: 133
Coventry Chandlerview full entry
Reference: Chandler Coventry - Obsession [Is this same catalogue as the 1993. Exhibition catalogue of selected works from the Chandler Coventry collection. Includes work by Brett Whiteley, Gunter Christmann, Neil Moore, Michael Esson, Gabriela Frutos, George Foxhill, David Hockney, Geoff La Gerche, Joe Brainard, Albert Irvin, Bridget Riley, Karel Appel, Mike Nicholls, Jill Noble, Emanuel Raft, Dick Watkins, Angus Nivison, Donald Friend, Phillip Martin, Pablo Picasso, Loudon Sainthill, Aida Tomescu, Tony Tuckson, Alex Wanders, and Dick Watkins.
Publishing details: Campbelltown: Campbelltown City Art Gallery, 1995.
55 pages, illustrations, some in colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Tischbauer Alfredview full entry
Reference: From SLNSW:
Tischbauer, Alfred, fl. 1880-95
George Street, Sydney, 1883 / Alfred Tischbauer
1883
Call Number DG 210
oil Painting
71.5 x 91.5 cm.

Alfred Tischbauer was a teacher of perspective at East Sydney Technical College when he painted this work. Originally from Alsace, Tischbauer trained as a scene painter and designer and worked at the Paris Opera. He was involved in the Paris Communes of 1871, and like his fellow artist and teacher Lucien Henry, was exiled to New Caledonia and came to Sydney after a political amnesty in 1879. Tischbauer stayed only a few years in Sydney, then went to New York and became a successful stage designer.

References:
De Vries, Susanna. Historic Sydney as seen by its early artists. Rev. ed. North Ryde, N.S.W. : Angus & Robertson, 1987, c1983 Moore, William. The story of Australian art. Sydney : Angus & Robertson, 1934
McCulloch, Alan. The encyclopedia of Australian art. 3rd ed. St Leonards, N.S.W. : Allen & Unwin, 1994

Presented by Sir William Dixson, between Oct. 1935 and June 1936
Sharp Martin (1942-2013)view full entry
Reference: Pop, by Peter Draffin ; illustrated by Martin Sharp.

Draffin's experimental novella illustrated with Sharp's psychedelic black and white graphics - extremely scarce book.
Publishing details: London ; Melbourne ; Sydney : Scripts, [1967]. First edition. Square octavo, pictorial stiff wrappers with Martin Sharp design, 115 pp,
Ref: 1009
Barak William view full entry
Reference: from Douglas Stewart Fine Books Aug 2015: William Barak at Coranderrk, circa 1900
[BARAK, William Barak (Beruk) c.1824-1903] Photographer unknown.
# 11410
Photographic glass magic lantern slide, 82 x 82 mm, with original typed label 59. King Billy; in fine condition.
The sobriquet King Billy was commonly used by white people in the nineteenth and early twentieth century as a generic name for Aboriginal leaders. The subject of this portrait is, however, identifiable as William Barak (Beruk), respected Wurundjeri-Willum elder, spokesman and artist. The photograph was taken by an unknown photographer, probably between 1900 and 1903, at Coranderrk Reserve, near Healesville, east of Melbourne, where Barak spent the last half of his life. (For a similar portrait, cf. National Museum of Australia, collection number IR 4533.0320 ).
Morris Rufus view full entry
Reference: The adventures of Joker Jack
KAY, Timothy; MORRIS, Rufus (illustrator)


Publishing details: Sydney : Dawfox Productions, [1944]. Small oblong quarto, publisher's cloth backed pictorial papered boards (rubbed, corners bumped), title page with 65 mm tear at lower left corner and child's ownership inscription, [32] pp, with full-page colour illustrations and sepia drawings in the text by Rufus Morris; pastedowns, preliminaries and rear endpapers.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: Aspects of the work of John Perceval 1947 - 1968 (signed copy)


Publishing details: Sydney : Clune Galleries, 1968. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 4, catalogue of 38 works.
Ref: 1009
Benjamin Jasonview full entry
Reference: Jason Benjamin : post history


Publishing details: Melbourne : Scott Livesey Galleries, 2012. Quarto, gilt-lettered blue cloth, unpaginated, essay by Ashley Crawford, colour plates, invitation to exhibition launch included. 
Ref: 1000
Marsh Daleview full entry
Reference: The art of Dale Marsh


Publishing details: Sydney : Dale Marsh Studio, 1981. Quarto, gold stamped calfskin boards with slipcase, 29pp [75pp of plates]. Features 75 colour plates in addition to biographical essays and a tipped in sketch . Limited to 400 copies, signed by the artist with an original drawing.
Ref: 1009
Hall Anneview full entry
Reference: Anne Hall [Hall was a constant companion to John Perceval at the time, they were to marry in 1972.].


Publishing details: Adelaide : Bonython Art Gallery, 1969. Octavo, exhibition catalogue, folding card, catalogue of 25 works. Inscribed 'To Joy from Anne Hall 1969'.
Ref: 1000
Scott Harriet & Helenaview full entry
Reference: SCOTT, Harriet & Helena. HISTORICAL DRAWINGS OF MOTHS AND BUTTERFLIES. From the collection of The Australian Museum. ‘Superb 19th century drawings by the daughters of the entomologist Alexander Walker Scott.’
Publishing details: Syd. Craftsman House. 1988. Folio. Or.cl. Dustjacket. 147pp. Many col & b/w plates. Near Fine. 1st ed.
Ref: 1009
Hunt John Horburyview full entry
Reference: JOHN HORBURY HUNT. Radical Architect, 1838-1904. By Peter Reynolds, Leslie Muir & Joy Hughes.
Publishing details: Syd. Historic Houses Trust. 2002. 4to. Ill.wrapps. 166pp. Profusely illustrated in colour & b/w. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Little Bruce view full entry
Reference: LITTLE, Bruce. PAINTING AUSTRALIA. Fine. A study of Australian landscape painting, using examples by the author. Illustrated in colour throughout. Contains 42 colour plates by Bruce Little, who was born in 1929 in the Sydney suburb of Kogarah.
Publishing details: Melb. Self-published. 1990. 4to. Col.ill.bds. 57pp. Profusely ill. in col.
Ref: 1000
Parkinson Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Botanical riches: stories of botanical exploration by Richard Aitken.

A Creative Fellow in 2004, Australian historian Richard Aitken traces the gradual realisation of the potential of plants for medicinal, nutritional, flavouring and decorative purposes across history. Magnificently illustrated with some of the world's most glorious engraved, lithographed and hand-coloured botanical illustrations, Botanical riches is a colourful history filled with enthralling tales of botanical exploration.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library Victoria, 2006, 244pp with index, select bibliography, list of illustrations and notes on sources..
Redoute Pierre-Josephview full entry
Reference: see Botanical riches: stories of botanical exploration by Richard Aitken.

A Creative Fellow in 2004, Australian historian Richard Aitken traces the gradual realisation of the potential of plants for medicinal, nutritional, flavouring and decorative purposes across history. Magnificently illustrated with some of the world's most glorious engraved, lithographed and hand-coloured botanical illustrations, Botanical riches is a colourful history filled with enthralling tales of botanical exploration.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library Victoria, 2006, 244pp with index, select bibliography, list of illustrations and notes on sources..
Bauer Ferdinandview full entry
Reference: see Botanical riches: stories of botanical exploration by Richard Aitken.

A Creative Fellow in 2004, Australian historian Richard Aitken traces the gradual realisation of the potential of plants for medicinal, nutritional, flavouring and decorative purposes across history. Magnificently illustrated with some of the world's most glorious engraved, lithographed and hand-coloured botanical illustrations, Botanical riches is a colourful history filled with enthralling tales of botanical exploration.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library Victoria, 2006, 244pp with index, select bibliography, list of illustrations and notes on sources..
Sweet Robertview full entry
Reference: see Botanical riches: stories of botanical exploration by Richard Aitken.

A Creative Fellow in 2004, Australian historian Richard Aitken traces the gradual realisation of the potential of plants for medicinal, nutritional, flavouring and decorative purposes across history. Magnificently illustrated with some of the world's most glorious engraved, lithographed and hand-coloured botanical illustrations, Botanical riches is a colourful history filled with enthralling tales of botanical exploration.
Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library Victoria, 2006, 244pp with index, select bibliography, list of illustrations and notes on sources..
Eve Pownall Awardview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Bonwick James - a profileview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Alphabet booksview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Calvert William and Samuelview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Cawthorne William Aview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Carter Norman pages 21, 23view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

McCrae Hugh pages 21, 23view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Missingham Hal p24view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Cole E W view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Ferrier Suzanneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Mills Caroleview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Niland Deborahview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Base Graemeview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Russell Elaineview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Rolland W Mview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Freedman Harold 1915-1999view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Howden Marjorie 1911-1988view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Thompson Romaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Derham Frances illus p44view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Mass Celesteview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Angus Donview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Kilgour Elmaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Clarke Joseph A 1840-1890view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Meredith Louisa Anne 1812-1895view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Mahony Frank Pview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Digby Desmondview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Baker Jeannieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Spowers Ethelview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Allen Pamelaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Brooks Ron view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Mullins Patriciaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Young Noelaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Zak Drahosview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Outhwaite Ida Rentoul 176-9view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Hann Marjorieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Graham Bobview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Tan Shaunview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Rogers Gregoryview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Rogers Gregoryview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Johnson A Jview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Macfarlane Jview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Campbell J Fview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Lennox Johnview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Laroche Sandraview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Lloyd Charlotte Jview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

O’Harris Pixieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Cunningham Walterview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Smith Craigview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Denton Terryview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

McLean Andrewview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Spudvilas Anneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

McInerney Kunyi June-Anneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

McCrae Tommyview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Miller Olgaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Schapel Denisview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Hannay Lorraineview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Bancroft Bronwynview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Anning Michael Boiyoolview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Roughsey Dick Goobalathaldinview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Lindsay Lionel ‘Chunder Loo’view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Bulgin Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Bulgin Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Frolich Lview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Hawkins Sheila 1905-1999 profileview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Souter D H profileview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Lindsay Norman p152f 213view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Oldfield Peggy view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Hook Jeffview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Tanner Janeview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Tanner Janeview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Riddle Tohbyview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Boyer Susyview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Corrigan Mabelview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

James Annview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gamble Kimview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gamble Kimview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gibbs Mayview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gibbs May profile p178view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gibbs May profile p178view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Morris Ethel Jackson 1891-1985 profile p180view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Maltby Peg view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Rowe Minnie I 190ffview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Gaze Harold p195ffview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Connor Desview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

MacIntyre Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Browne Gordonview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Wall Dorothyview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Vivas Julieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Hobbs Leighview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Winckler Rubyview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Macdonald Barbaraview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Alsop Edithview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Wright Alanview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Waller Christianview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Skottowe Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Anderson Anneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Christie Connieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Druce Kayview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Montgomery Anneview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Stedman Jeanette Cview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

McDonald Babsview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Durack Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Chew Sylviaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Thomas Mayview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Tate Bernardview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Downing Brownieview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Greenwood Tedview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Dore L Mview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Rodd Nellview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Bell Edwinaview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Thompson Colinview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Woolman Stevenview full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Children’s Book Council of Australia award winners list 1946 - 2008view full entry
Reference: see Bottersnikes & other lost things - a celebration of Australian Illustrated Children’s books by Juliet O'Conor. Brief biographiocal information is included on many of the artists whose work is illustrated in the book.

[’Author Juliet O’Conor curates the Library’s  Children's Literature Collection, which at 100,000 titles is the leading collection of its kind in the world. This beautifully illustrated volume includes works from some of Australia's most-loved writers and illustrators, and provides an expansive exploration of Australian literature from past to present.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: The Miegunyah Press in association with State Library , Victoria, 2009, 262pp, hc, dw, with index,

Abbott Johnview full entry
Reference: from DAAO: by Patricia R. McDonald,
Date written: 1992
Last updated: 2011

John Abbott, b. 1803 NSW, Artist (Painter)

This sketcher, watercolourist and songwriter became the registrar-general of births, deaths and marriages in Van Diemen's Land in the mid nineteenth century. His watercolours were exhibited in the 1866 Melbourne and 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibitions.

This sketcher, watercolourist and songwriter became the registrar-general of births, deaths and marriages in Van Diemen's Land in the mid nineteenth century. His watercolours were exhibited in the 1866 Melbourne and 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibitions. - Sketcher, songwriter, surveyor, soldier and public servant, was born in New South Wales, son of Major Edward Abbott and his wife Louisa, daughter of Admiral Smith. Between 1789 and 1810 his father served with the NSW Corps and in 1815 was appointed the first Deputy Judge-Advocate of Van Diemen’s Land. By 1824 John was clerk to the Hobart Town bench of magistrates. Four years later, after applying for a position with the VDL Survey Department, John Abbott moved to Sydney and joined the NSW Surveyor-General’s Department under Thomas Mitchell. By 1832 he was assistant surveyor in charge of the approaches to the new Lennox Bridge at Lapstone in the lower Blue Mountains.

Abbott later returned to Van Diemen’s Land where he was registrar-general of births, deaths and marriages in 1840-57. In 1842 he acquired 640 acres at Gordon on the D’Entrecasteaux Channel and built a house that he named Rookwood. Abbott never married. He devoted considerable time to gardening and to his various cultural interests, including painting watercolour sketches and writing the words for the 'Song of the Fair Emigrant’, published as sheet music by the Hobart Town lithographer R.V. Hood in 1854.

Towards the end of his life Abbott sent three entries to the 1866 Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition: a watercolour view of the locale of the coal on his property; a Book of Tasmanian Scraps, from an Australian Native; and Busts of Tasmanian Natives . He certainly executed the first two, but was probably only the exhibitor of the third (possibly busts of Truganini and Woureddy by the Tasmanian sculptor Benjamin Law). His Book of Tasmanian Scraps was awarded a medal and was subsequently shown at the 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibition where he also showed a watercolour of D’Entrecasteaux Channel (possibly the same 1866 view) and another of his drawings, Dogs, was exhibited by C. Barrer.

Abbott died in Hobart Town on 10 July 1875, aged 71. His only painting held in a public collection is a monochrome watercolour dated 1828, The Boat Harbour of Woollooderra [now Ulladulla, New South Wales], as seen from the S.W., which was transferred from the Lands Department to the Mitchell Library in 1921. Other sketches survive with descendants.


Hood Robin Vaughanview full entry
Reference: see DAAO: Biography of Robin Vaughan Hood from Design and Art Australia Online
Staff Writer, 1992; Last updated: 2011:

Lithographer, printer, frame-maker and fine arts dealer, arrived at Hobart Town in the Warrior on 27 June 1833. No original artwork by Hood is known, but he was an integral part of Hobart's cultural life. He was accompanied by his wife Sarah née Lloyd, his 14-year-old stepson Richard Lloyd, and his 5-year-old son Robin Lloyd. On his arrival he gave his occupation as carpenter, but he soon abandoned general carpentry for the specialist trades of carver, gilder and frame-maker. His first known address was 1 Murray Street ('near St David’s Church’) in 1836. He moved to 108 Elizabeth Street in March 1838, then to a 'weatherboarded house’ in New Town Road which was destroyed by fire in November 1840. The following year he built a shop and residence at 34 Liverpool Street which he called Somerset House.

Following the success of the art exhibition organised by John Skinner Prout and others at the Legislative Council Chambers on 6 January 1845, Hood built a gallery adjacent to his Liverpool Street premises. In February 1846 he advertised that the gallery was ready, and the committee held its second exhibition there on 24 May. Hood’s gallery became the focus for the exhibition and sale of fine arts in Hobart exhibiting, among others, the works of painters such as John Glover and Thomas Wainewright and, later, Haughton Forrest . When Prout left for London in April 1848 Hood bought his lithographic equipment and began a new career as lithographer and printer. Clifford Craig has noted that all known Hood prints were published after the purchase of Prout’s press. The earliest are probably a series of whaling prints drawn on the stone by William Duke and published by Hood in September 1848.

Hood showed picture frames at London’s Great Exhibition in 1851 and in Paris in 1855. Yet he apparently intended his career to be short for in February 1851 he retired in favour of his son, Robin Lloyd Hood (1828-1916), who became a well-known printer and frame-maker in his own right. Despite this public withdrawal, however, Hood seems to have continued lithographic printing from his residence at Fitzroy Place, publishing lithographs by Frank Dunnet in November 1858 and Henry D’Emden in 1861, as well as exhibiting picture frames. He seems to have retained the ownership of the Somerset House premises as well. In February 1862 he advertised that the property, including the exhibition room, was for sale. The previous August he had turned the 'large and commodious premises’ at 56 Liverpool Street into the 'City Restaurant’, which offered both food and accommodation. The printing business, then trading as R.L. Hood & Brother, was next door.

Robin Vaughan Hood died at Hobart in 1888, his wife having predeceased him in 1857. While no original artwork by Hood is known and drawing onto the stone was apparently always the work of others there are sufficient Hood lithographs, otherwise unacknowledged, to suggest that he may sometimes have performed this task himself. In any event, as lithographic printer and fine arts entrepreneur, he was an integral part of Hobart’s cultural life.

Atkinson Robert 1863-96view full entry
Reference: see Australian Watercolours 1880s to1990s from the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Works by about 70 Australian watercolourists. With details of works and references.
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1995, card covers, 128pp, with index.
Lovett Mildred 1880-1955view full entry
Reference: see Australian Watercolours 1880s to1990s from the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Works by about 70 Australian watercolourists. With details of works and references.
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1995, card covers, 128pp, with index.
Nimmo Norma 1920-90view full entry
Reference: see Australian Watercolours 1880s to1990s from the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Works by about 70 Australian watercolourists. With details of works and references.
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1995, card covers, 128pp, with index.
Mourtzakis Nick b1950view full entry
Reference: see Australian Watercolours 1880s to1990s from the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Works by about 70 Australian watercolourists. With details of works and references.
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1995, card covers, 128pp, with index.
19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastelsview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Alston Abbeyview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Ashton Julianview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Atkinson Robertview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Brierly Oswaldview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Bunny Rupertview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Buvelot Louisview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Coates Georgeview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Cusack Edithview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Finlay Hughview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Fullwood Albert Henryview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Gill S T view full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Glover Johnview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
von Guerard Eugeneview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Heaphy Thomas Jnrview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Hopkins Livingstoneview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Lambert Georgeview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Lewin John Williamview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Lister Lister Wview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Lycett Josephview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Mahony Frankview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Lycett Josephview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Martens Conradview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Mather Johnview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
May Philview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Mcrae Tommyview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Minns B Eview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Montifiore E Lview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Piguenit W Cview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Prout John Skinnerview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Ramsay Hughview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Russell John Peterview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Salvana Johnview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Smedley William Thomasview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Souter D Hview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Strutt Williamview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Terry Frederickview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Withers Walterview full entry
Reference: 19th century Australian watercolours drawings & pastels from the Gallery’s collection, by Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan and Patricia James [AGNSW]. 39 artists with notes on them and the works reproduced. Bibliography
Publishing details: Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2005, hc, dw, 144pp, with index
Watercoloursview full entry
Reference: Australian 19th Century watercolours in the AGNSW
Publishing details: AGNSW, 1991, 6pp folding card
Rosser Celiaview full entry
Reference: Banksia Lady: Celia Rosser, Botanical Artist
by Carolyn Landon [’This is the story of Celia Rosser, internationally acclaimed botanical illustrator, who dedicated her life to painting the entire genus of Banksia, the only artist to have done so. Her dedication to the task put her at the centre of the Monash Banksia Project for twenty-five years, and culminated in the production of an extraordinary three-volume florilegium that became one of the great books published in the twentieth century.
Banksia Lady reveals the emergence of an artist who grew up in difficult circumstances during the Great Depression and who pursued her art as a way of protecting herself from the harsher side of life. The story follows Celia’s struggle to pursue her artistic passion while fulfilling the expectations that women of the 1950s would subordinate themselves as wives and mothers. As her children became more independent, she recognised opportunities and, eventually, found a place at Monash University to fully express herself through her art.
In telling this story of Celia Rosser’s unparalleled talent and extraordinary achievement, this book explores the history of botanical illustration, botany, academia, gardens and their herbarium, and Australia’s place in changing the shape of the world’]
Publishing details: Monash University, 2015, Paperback

Ref: 1000
Thinking the Antipodesview full entry
Reference: Thinking the Antipodes by Peter Beilharz -[’In 1956 Bernard Smith wrote that we in Australia were migratory birds. This was to become a leading motif of his own thinking, and a significant inspiration for Peter Beilharz. Beilharz came to argue that the idea of the antipodes made sense less in its geographical than its cultural form, viewed as a relation rather than a place. Australians had one foot here and one there, whichever ‘there’ this was. This way of thinking with and after Bernard Smith makes up one current of Beilharz’s best Australian essays.
Two other streams contribute to the collection. The second recovers and publicises antipodean intellectuals, from Childe to Evatt to Stretton to Jean Martin, who have often been overshadowed here by the reception given to metropolitan celebrity thinkers; and examines others, like Hughes and Carey, who have been celebrated as writers more than as interpreters of the antipodean condition.
The third stream engages with mainstream views of Australian writing, and with the limits of these views. If we think in terms of cultural traffic, then the stories we tell about Australia will also be global and regional in a broader sense. Australia is the result of cultural traffic, local and global.’]
Publishing details: Monash University, 2015
Ref: 1000
Smith Bernardview full entry
Reference: see Thinking the Antipodes by Peter Beilharz -[’In 1956 Bernard Smith wrote that we in Australia were migratory birds. This was to become a leading motif of his own thinking, and a significant inspiration for Peter Beilharz. Beilharz came to argue that the idea of the antipodes made sense less in its geographical than its cultural form, viewed as a relation rather than a place. Australians had one foot here and one there, whichever ‘there’ this was. This way of thinking with and after Bernard Smith makes up one current of Beilharz’s best Australian essays.
Two other streams contribute to the collection. The second recovers and publicises antipodean intellectuals, from Childe to Evatt to Stretton to Jean Martin, who have often been overshadowed here by the reception given to metropolitan celebrity thinkers; and examines others, like Hughes and Carey, who have been celebrated as writers more than as interpreters of the antipodean condition.
The third stream engages with mainstream views of Australian writing, and with the limits of these views. If we think in terms of cultural traffic, then the stories we tell about Australia will also be global and regional in a broader sense. Australia is the result of cultural traffic, local and global.’]
Publishing details: Monash University, 2015
Sculpture by the Seaview full entry
Reference: Sculpture by the Sea - The First Fifteen Years 1997-2011 - a brief retrospective by John McDonald and Michael Hill. ‘A celebration of Sydney's annual Sculpture by the Sea coastal walk.’ Lists all sculptors selected 1997 - 2011. [To be indexed urgently] [’As part of our celebrations for the tenth anniversary exhibition in Cottesloe we have released this essay written by John McDonald from our Sculpture by the Sea book. If you would like a copy of the book with hundreds of unforgettable photographs from the first 15 years of exhibitions (1997 – 2011), why not consider supporting our not-for-profit organisation by purchasing our Sculpture by the Sea book? Click here to buy it online or come visit us during the last weekend at our Cottesloe exhibition to get your copy.

Written by John McDonald

How long does it take for an annual art exhibition to have a history? Two years? 10 years? It is an achievement for any large-scale exhibition to last a decade. Very few shows display the staying power of the Archibald Prize for portraiture at the Art Gallery of NSW, which began in 1921 and seems as popular as ever - even if the quality of the entries often suggests a good argument for euthanasia.
 
By the end of 2011 David Handley’s good idea will have been seen for the fifteenth time at Bondi; for the seventh time at Cottelsoe Beach, Western Australia; and for the second time in Aarhus, Denmark. Along the way there have been shows in Tasmania, Noosa, Albany and Darwin for the 1998 Olympic Arts Festival, and Martin Place in the City of Sydney. Another satellite was ‘Ephemeral Art at the Invisible Lodge’, in which a small number of artists created sculptures solely out of materials found on Tasmania’s Freycinet Peninsula around Friendly Beaches Lodge run by Freycinet Experience.
 
We tend to think of sculpture as something large, ponderous and immovable, but over the past 15 years – the time span that constitutes a generation, according to the philosopher, Ortega y Gasset - the SXS concept has shown itself to be remarkably versatile. From the very beginning, when the inaugural one-day event in 1997 attracted 25,000 people, it has enjoyed an astonishing popularity. Indeed, the popular appeal of SXS has occasionally worked against it. In the days of Courbet and Manet, Zola and Baudelaire, artists and writers were concious of the need to be popular. The patronage of noblemen and prelates had waned, with the general public being the new arbiters of success or failure.
 
In our day, when government agencies and museums are willing to support the most unlovable or controversial art, popularity has taken on a different meaning. That which is adored by the masses must necessarily be no good. To be truly important, art must be unpopular, and preferably incomprehensible.
 
For much of its lifespan SXS has sought to convince that a show may be both popular and of the highest quality. It has also had to argue that massive popularity does not translate into a financial windfall.
 
David Handley recalls that the entire budget of the first SXS was $11,000, of which $8,500 was spent on artists’ awards. The show itself was put together by volunteers, happy to get behind an initiative that gave sculpture some much-needed exposure. I was asked to make the initial selection along with Ron Robertson-Swann, and we were astonished by the quantity and variety of entries for an exhibition that would run for only one day, from morning till dusk. It seemed there was a previously unsuspected subculture of sculptors in Australia, occupying different level of amateurism and professionalism. For every established sculptor such as Michael Le Grand, the co-recipient of the major prize in the first SXS, there were others working away on weekends and evenings in backyard studios.
 
That first SXS had an infectious energy, and was bouyed up by the kind of good will that is increasingly rare nowadays. There was a general determination that this celebration of sculpture should not be an isolated occurence, but an annual event. What followed was a decade and a half of hard work, good and bad luck, fund raising, fact finding, network builiding, publicity blitzes, and all the logistical nightmares associated with a show that needs to move massive sculptures around the world and install them in unconventional locations.
 
Over 15 years, SXS went from being a one day wonder, staffed by friends and well-wishers, to a highly professional organisation with its own corporate structure; a crack installation team under the leadership of Axel Arnott and subsequently Noah Birch; a vigorous program of sales and commissions; and a web of contacts among sculptors and arts professionals that extends around the world. SXS has continued to channel a very large percentage of the money it raises back to exhibiting artists in terms of set-up costs, travel assistance, awards and fellowships, though they are the first to acknowledge more support for the artists is required.
 
One of the most important aspects of SXS has been the participation of so many international sculptors, and laterly the oportunity it provides for Australian artists to show their work in Europe. Some international sculptors, such as Keizo Ushio and Koichi Ishino of Japan and Keld Moseholm of Denmark, have becomes SXS regulars and favourites. Occasional exhibitors, such as the celebrated British sculptors, Anthony Caro and Philip King, have thrown their support behind the exhibition, lending it credibility and gravitas. The overseas artists have also proved highly successful, with Czech artist, Vaclav Fiala, receiving the major prize in 2004 and 2005.
 
The other most significant development has been the establishment of SXS as a not for profit incorporated association in 2003, opening the door to donations and bequests from corporate and private patrons. In 2011 the NSW State government also became a major supporter, having been impressed by an economic impact study of 2009 which showed that SXS generated almost $24 million worth of benefits for the State each year.
 
It hasn’t been a tale of smooth, inexorable progress, but a succession of stops and starts. SXS has had its hard times, often having to fight for its financial survival. Over the years the statistics reveal that the Bondi show has been extended from one day to three weeks, and attendances have grown from 25,000 to 500,000. This figure makes it easily Australia’s most successful art exhibition in terms of numbers. To take just one point of comparison: the National Gallery of Australia recently boasted record-breaking visitor numbers of 476,000 for the exhibition, Masterpieces from Paris. The show ran for 20 weeks to achieve this figure.
 
Extrapolate the SXS numbers over 20 weeks and one arrives at a figure of 3.3 million. This is, of course, only a statistical fantasy, but it serves to underline that fact that SXS exerts a phenomenal hold on the public imagination. True to David Handley’s original ambition, it has become one of the most eagerly anticipated events in Sydney’s cultural calendar.
 
Within 7 years, the Cottelsoe edition of the show, has experienced the same booming success. Although the population of Perth does not allow for huge attendances, SXS easily outdraws any other art event in Western Australia with over 200,00 visitors. In terms of sales and commissions, Cottelsoe has proven to be the most successful venue of all for the artists.
 
The last frontier for the SXS team was to take the show overseas – an idea that required major international support in order to overcome the financial and logistical problems. Every month or two for 12 years an offer for an overseas show has arrived but none were suitable or were declared too difficult. The opportunity ultimately arose because of the romance of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Mary Donaldson of Tasmania. The couple had visted SXS at Bondi in 2000, and expressed a desire to see such a show in Denmark. In 2009, after an exhaustive preparation process, that exhibition was realised in Denmark’s second city, Aarhus.
 
The scepticism that some in Aarhus felt for the idea was blown away by the visitor numbers: over 500,000 over 4 weeks. Denmark had never seen anything like it, and the show now seems destined to be a regular feature of life on the Jutland peninsula.
 
From one day at Bondi to a month in Denmark, SXS has taken on an unstoppable momentum. It has brought Australian artists into close contact with their overseas peers, and has given the world a demonstration of Australian initiative and ingenuity. It has raised the profile of sculpture and provided a new model of a quality art exhibition that appeals to the broadest possible audience. As the juggernaut rolls on, these achievements should not be perceived as the pinnacle of success, but as a platform from which to shoot for the stars.’]

[’"To celebrate the first fifteen years of Sculpture by the Sea we have produced a book featuring hundreds of images from each of the Australian and Danish exhibitions, together with essays by John McDonald, Dr. Michael Hill and David Handley".’] [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Sculpture by the Sea Inc., 2011,
Paperback – 232 pages, Profusely ill. in col.
Amazing Australian Artistsview full entry
Reference: Amazing Australian Artists by Alyssa Constable and Danielle Gilbert. Includes work by:

Kathy Blakemore
Meg Brown
Trevor Ierino
Stephanie Jakovac
Lizabeth Souness
Heather Sparks
Katharine Rattray
etc

Publishing details: Artme Gallery, 2015
Ref: 1000
Australian Watercolour Insituteview full entry
Reference: see Brushes with History : Masters of Watercolour by Linda and David van Nunen. Includes artists’ biographies and bibliographies. [’The world's oldest painting medium, watercolour has remained a significant source of inspiration and expression for many artists, as it was for J.M.W. Turner, Thomas Girtin, Alexander Cozens, John Constable, Eugene Delacroix, Paul Cezanne and Picasso, among other luminaries in the history of art. The freshness of a diluted pigment diffused over a responsive paper can create magnificent myriad effects of luminosity and translucence not possible in any other medium.
'Brushes with History: Masters of Watercolour Ninety Years of the Australian Watercolour Institute', by Linda van Nunen and David van Nunen, with a foreword by Dr. Michael Brand, Director, Art Gallery of New South Wales, is a lavishly illustrated, deluxe edition produced by Australia's premier art publisher, in celebration of the 90th anniversary of the Australian Watercolour Institute, the country's first and foremost national society of professional watercolourists.
Throughout its history, the AWI has promoted the practice of watercolour through national and international exhibitions of the finest paintings produced in the medium, numbering among its members and exhibitors many of Australia's celebrated artists -- from Arthur Streeton, Hans Heysen, Rupert Bunny, Blamire Young, Margaret Preston and Thea Proctor to some of the most important contemporary painters working today in Australia, England, Scotland, China and America.
This 220-page publication both chronicles the history of Australia's pre-eminent watercolour society and surveys the diversity of techniques, styles and subject matter in the evolution of watercolour over the past nine decades.
Linda and David van Nunen have produced not just a volume of the work of current members but have documented in depth the activities of artists who have been major figures both in the history of the Australian Watercolour Institute and this country’s visual arts culture. It is through their efforts that the achievements of these past members will now not be forgotten. It is a must-have book for anyone with an interest in watercolour.’] [to be indexed] *

Publishing details: Australian Watercolour Institute, 2015,
Hardback – 220 pages, colour illustrations, colour portraits.
Wolseley Johnview full entry
Reference: John Wolseley Land Marks III by Sasha Grishin. [’For more than half a century John Wolseley has been widely acclaimed for the way his art practice engages with the environment and broader ecology. Working across several art mediums, but mostly known for his experimental techniques in printmaking and watercolour, Wolseley’s work crosses over a number of disciplines including the natural sciences and philosophy.

Although he draws on empirical investigation frequently immersing himself in the Australian environment, his deeply moving and profoundly beautiful works are full of great passion and consummate skill. Land Marks III is a collaboration between artist and art historian, John Wolseley and Sasha Grishin, which has developed over more than twenty years. It builds on two earlier editions to advance a timely and well-informed assessment of an artist who has been increasingly seen amongst artists as the environmental conscience of our time.



Publishing details: Thames & Hudson, 2015, 272 pages hardcover colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Gladwell Shaunview full entry
Reference: DOUBLE WAR: SHAUN GLADWELL by
DR KIT MESSHAM-MUIR (VISUAL CULTURE AND THE WARS IN AFGHANISTAN AND IRAQ. [’HE FIRST PUBLISHED SUSTAINED CRITICAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE ARTWORK OF SHAUN GLADWELL, ‘] [’An art theorist and Museologist, Messham-Muir's research focuses on the psychological and emotional dimensions of visualising war. He is also a member of Newcastle's Centre for the History of Violence. 
Messham-Muir was given privileged access to Gladwell's studio throughout the development of Gladwell's work. Double War's six chapters explore Gladwell's war artist works, as well as the broader political and cultural contexts of the War on Terror.
Gladwell is known for his video installation works, has represented Australia at the 2009 Venice Biennale and was appointed as an Australian Official War Artist in late 2009. He spent a month in Afghanistan and the Middle East with the Australian Defence Force, and drew upon this experience to produce a large body of paintings, video and photographic works.
Kit Messham-Muir's collaboration with artist, Shaun Gladwell, has produced one of the most significant and original interpretations of the space and time of war. With Gladwell's lens focused on the war in Afghanistan, and in particular the Australian troops deployed there, the book manages to capture the war as lived experience in all its moments of crisis as well as its most routine aspects. Messham-Muir and Gladwell must also be congratulated for illustrating the profound sense in which a collaboration between art practice and the study of war can produce an invaluable source for research and teaching.
- Vivienne Jabri, Professor of International Politics, Department of War Studies, King's College London.’]

Publishing details: THAMES & HUDSON 2015)
Ref: 1000
MacPherson Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert MacPherson: The Painter’s Reach [’... accompanies the artist’s first major exhibition at QAGOMA and the first major exhibition of his work since 2001. This beautiful and substantial publication explores MacPherson’s distinct and multifaceted career, and conceptualises his recent practice in broader philosophical, political and art historical terms. Contributors include the exhibition’s curator, US-based writer and curator, Ingrid Periz, Angela Goddard and Trevor Smith as well as an interview with the artist and Ewen McDonald. An illustrated chronology, selected bibliography and exhibition history also feature.

Publishing details: QAGOMA, 2015, 216 pages hardcover colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Boyd Merricview full entry
Reference: Merric Boyd and Murrumbeena - the life of an artist in a time and place, by Colin Smith. With essays and 52 interviews with ‘The Boyds and the Murrumbeena Community.’ With bibliography and index. [’... it's taken Colin Smith twenty five years and a lot of passion to finally get his book "Merric Boyd and Murrumbeena the life of an artist in a time and a place" finally published and we highly recommend it to those interested in Australian pottery and art.
A 450 page hardcover book it details the history of Murrumbeena and the
importance of the Merric Boyd family. Containing unique drawings done by David Boyd and many first person interviews of Boyd family members and friends, and those who knew them, it is an important historical document.’] [’In 1913 Murrumbeena was a village surrounded by market gardens, paddocks and large private estates. It was also the place where a young, creative and resourceful Merric Boyd came to live and establish a pottery. For almost half a century, he produced some of the finest and most original ceramics made in this country or any other and, with his wife Doris, raised five remarkably talented and artistic children.
Since 1988 Colin Smith has been recording the recollections of those who knew Merric Boyd and his family. Their stories provide a unique insight into his community and into Murrumbeena's most famous residents - the Boyds.’]
Publishing details: Melbourne, the author, 2013, Hardback, 460 pages, Copy signed by author.
Bowers Stephen`view full entry
Reference: Stephen Bowers, Beyond bravura by
Damon Moon, John Neylon, Stephen Bowers. [’Stephen Bowers makes pottery that fires the imagination. He combines rich, modern life experiences with skills and traditions that stretch back thousands of years to create complex works full of wonder. From familiar, everyday items, to the transformative alchemy of deluxe and super deluxe bravura museum pieces, his art is acclaimed and collected across Australia and overseas.

This is the first major publication devoted to Stephen Bowers' craft. It shows how the history of his working life as an educator, studio manager and arts administrator melded with his artistic career to produce an original and outstanding contribution to contemporary Australian ceramics. Mapping the artist's inspirations, influences and ideas, detailing the formation and development of his practice, this book discusses his creative techniques and methods, and explains the importance of his collaborative approach to making work. Stephen Bowers: Beyond Bravura celebrates the intellect, imagination and inventiveness of an original Australian artist whose career extends already over 35 years.

'A long-term, in-depth account of the life and work of an artist...a beautiful book. It is excellent value. Another quality work from Wakefield Press.' - Jill, M/C’]
Publishing details: Wakefield Press, 2013, hc, dw, 160pp
Bertini Joview full entry
Reference: A man and his camel / written and illustrated by Jo Bertini. [’Follows the adventures of an old man as he travels through various countries on the ancient Silk Road in search of his lost Bactrian camel.
Notes For children.’]

Publishing details: University of Queensland Press, 1996 
©1996 
32 unnubered pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Backen Robynview full entry
Reference: Robyn Backen - Backspace. [’This book examines two decades of work by the Australian artist Robyn Backen. Her practice ranges from small- and large-scale installations through to site-specific public works. Most of these works are temporary. Only a very small number are permanent, or semi-permanent–that is, created for a specific life span. This inbuilt mortality that characterises most of Backen’s work is not something that can be redressed or undone; it is deliberate. Like many artists in Australia in the 1990s who were attracted to the methods and meanings of installation art, Backen’s intention was (and remains) to create ephemeral works. This presents many challenges for understanding her work as a whole. Indeed, writing the history of installation art in Australia raises many of the same questions that have already been posed and debated in relation to performance art, such as: Can you study performance art if you didn’t actually see it yourself? What kind of history can be written on the basis of documentation? And so forth.’]
Publishing details: Boccalatte, 2013?
Ref: 1000
Culliton Lucyview full entry
Reference: The Eye of the Beholder - The art of Lucy Culliton. Includes biographival information. [’Eye of the Beholder presents a survey exhibition of the art of Australian artist Lucy Culliton who is one of the most talented and important of Australia’s contemporary painters. Winning the Mosman Art Prize in 2000 was an important career milestone for Culliton, who has since enjoyed a meteoric career ascendancy exhibiting regularly to much critical and public acclaim.
Culliton graduated from the National Art School with a Diploma in Painting in 1996. Since, her creative output has been extraordinary. With an inexorable passion for her work, she is renowned for her intense scrutiny of a single subject rendered with a great sense of intimacy. Her gaze has ranged from much loved horses, farm animals and farm machinery; to domestic still life subjects of food, plants and curios; to Australian as well as international landscape subjects. Like many artists she draws direct inspiration from her immediate environment and circumstances, approaching her diverse subjects with an intensity that can only come through a strong connection with them.
Culliton is a regular finalist in the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes and her work is represented in several important public and private art collections. Culliton is represented by The Hughes Gallery, Sydney.
Eye of the Beholder features over 100 works including paintings which will be drawn from public and private collections, showcasing all aspects of the artist’s career.’]
Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2014, pb, 88pp
Feddersen Juttaview full entry
Reference: Substance of Shadows by Jutta Feddersen [’Jutta Feddersen is an internationally renowned sculptor and installation artist. Born in Germany, she moved to Australia as a young woman. Jutta began her career as a weaver and developed into an installation artist, producing work of haunting simplicity, elegance and beauty. Now in her seventies, Jutta is still an exciting working artist, exhibiting her latest works in a Sydney gallery in 2010. She lectured at the Department of Fine Art at the University of Newcastle for 18 years and retired as Adjunct Professor.’]
Publishing details: Murdoch Books, 2010, 260 pages

Ref: 1000
Gill Simrynview full entry
Reference: Simryn Gill : Pearls [edited by Sharmini Pereira].


Publishing details: London : Raking Leaves, 2008. 201 p. : col. ill. ; 25 cm.

Ref: 1000
Wilson Johnview full entry
Reference: John Wilson - The Journey Continues [’John Wilson is one of Australia’s leading landscape oil painters.  He grew up in the beautiful Blue Mountains of New South Wales.  Now John is a Multi-Award winning artist, whose elegant paintings capture the more elusive qualities unique to the Australian landscape.  His works, considered highly collectable are represented in private, corporate and public collections throughout Australia and internationally.  His paintings have been reproduced extensively, on cards, art reproductions. books including ‘Visual Artists of the Blue Mountains’, ‘ArtFiles’, several feature articles in Australian Artist and other International Artist magazines.
John's first book, “John Wilson Blue Mountains Artist” was edited and published by Ian Brownlee in 1989.  Now 25 years later, we present to you the fine art book, “John Wilson The Journey Continues”, also edited and published by Ian Brownlee.
Measuring 32.5cm x 23.5cm, the book is comprised of 192pp with 81 beautifully reproduced colour plates of John’s work. Throughout these pages John expresses once again his enduring passion for the Australian landscape.’]
Publishing details: Auspress, 192pp with 81 colour plates
Ref: 1000
Vozzo Vinceview full entry
Reference: The Life and Work of Vince Vozzo. [’World-acclaimed sculptor Vince Vozzo talks about his book, The Life and Work of Vince Vozzo, which charts the journey of a second-generation Italian kid from the western suburbs of Sydney from dyslexic, cartoon-obsessed school boy to sand sculptor on Bondi beach and art student, and then to prolific and acclaimed artist.’] [’Showcasing the work of Australian sculptor, Vince Vozzo, this beautiful book charts the journey of a second-generation Italian kid from the Western suburbs of Sydney — from dyslexic, cartoon-obsessed school boy to sand sculptor on Bondi beach, to art student, and, finally, prolific and acclaimed artist. In a career spanning three decades, Vozzo has exhibited in 32 solo exhibitions and produced thousands of artworks in different mediums. He has featured in numerous group exhibitions, most notably Sydney’s Sculpture by the Sea, where his magnificent sculpture has loomed large over the coastal horizon more 13 times to date. His work has been included in 36 prize exhibitions and with eight selections in the prestigious Wynne Prize, Vozzo holds the record for a sculptor in that competition. Vozzo’s giant slabs of imported Italian marble form the basis for his most spectacular work, including The Last Desire, which is the largest piece of single-handedly carved marble in Australia. Vozzo is a unique Australian artist, whose work is majestic in its sheer size and physicality and poetic in its execution.’]
Publishing details: Paperback – 192 pages
Ref: 1000
Waddell Craigview full entry
Reference: Craig Waddell - Heart Land, [’This high quality coffee table book documents the exhibition of contemporary Australian artist Craig Waddell held at Muk Muk Fine Art in Alice Springs in 2012.’]
Publishing details: Muk Muk Fine Art, 2012, Hardback, 65 pages
Burn Ianview full entry
Reference: Ian Burn - Minimal-Conceptual Work 1965 - 1970. Art Gallery of Western Australia, 6 February-29 March 1992. Essays by Paula Latos-Valier, John Stringer, Michael Dolk.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Western Australia, 1992, pb, 104pp
Hood Cherryview full entry
Reference: Harold’s End - Print Folio by Chery Hood. with 9 colour illustrations
Publishing details: Australian Print Workshop, nd, 6-page folding card.
Ref: 133
Niagara Galleryview full entry
Reference: Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists.
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Ref: 73
Abdulla Ian Wview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Abdulla Ian Wview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Baldessin Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Balson Ralphview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Benwell Stephenview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Boston Paulview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Brennan Angelaview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Christmann Gunterview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Ciccarone Juliaview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Gabori Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sallyview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Gladwell Shaunview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Gossage Starview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Hearman Louiseview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Heng Euanview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Hester Joyview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Hinder Frankview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Kellaway Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Larter Richardview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Macleod Euanview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
McKenna Noelview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Mununggurr Rerrkirrwangaview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Nickolls Trevorview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Purves Smith Peterview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Pwerle Minnieview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Sansom Garethview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Shore Arnoldview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Tjapaltjarri Bill Whiskeyview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Tjungurrayi Patrickview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Varvaressos Vickiview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Whisson Kenview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Niagara Gallery - Blue Chip XVII- The Collectors Exhibition. Includes biographical information on artists (eg ’literature and further reading’)
Publishing details: Niagara Gallery, March 2015, 80 pp, with price list.
Witnessing to Silenceview full entry
Reference: Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Ref: 133
Boltanski Christianview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Davila Juanview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Foley Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Hoffie Patview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Jaar Alfredoview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Kentridge Williamview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Malani Naliniview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Tuymans Lucview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Wei Guanview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Christanto Dadangview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Tuffery Michelview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Adipurnomo Nindtyoview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Bose Santiagoview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Jaarsma Mellaview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Mel Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Witnessing to Silence: Art and Human Rights, by Caroline Turner. Includes artists’ biographies. [’'This exhibition Witnessing to Silence and the international conference on "Art and Human Rights" with which it coincides are part of a research project at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, that began in 2000 to bring together scholars in many disciplines but especially law, the humanities and the arts.' - Caroline Turner.

15 artists from around the world have been chosen for the exhibitions which were held at four different venues in Canberra, Australia. The present catalogue brings together the exhibits as well as articles written on the artists. Biographies of artists are provided. With a foreword by Nancy Sever.

Artists from outside of Asia include: Christian Boltanski, Juan Davilla, Fiona Foley, Pat Hoffie, Alfredo Jaar, William Kentridge, Mella Jaarsma, Luc Tuymans, Michel Tuffery and Michel Mel.’]
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre, 2003, pb, 80pp
Blackman Charles (born 1928) view full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman - Drawing Dreams

Publishing details: published by Paul Elliot and Paul Alessi, 1995, limited edition book of 88, signed inside cover
38 x 28cm (page size)
Ref: 1003
Pearson Alanview full entry
Reference: A Painter’s Poems by Alan Pearson 1961-2014 [NZ artist, biography on back page]
Publishing details: Alexandra Stewart Press, NZ, 2014, 115 pp
Ref: 1000
Norton Charlesview full entry
Reference: painting with Scheding Berry Fine Art: Charles Norton (1826 -1872)
(Monumental bush grave) c1860s
watercolour
20.4 x 29.5 cm

For a similar example see McCulloch’s Encyclopedia of Australian Art, p737

References: Squatter Artist: Charles Norton, State Library of Victoria, 1989; Lost Images of Geelong, Geelong Gallery, 1986.

Gladwell Shaunview full entry
Reference: Shaun Gladwell : The Lacrima Chair
Publishing details: Sherman Contemporary Art, 2015
Ref: 1000
Harper Melindaview full entry
Reference: Melinda Harper - Colour Sensation, The Works of Melinda Harper [’Colour and optical vibrancy animate Melbourne artist Melinda Harper’s remarkable oeuvre of abstract works developed over three decades. While Harper is best known as a painter, this survey reveals a surprising diversity of practice in its inclusion of drawings, collages, screenprints, experimental photographs, painted objects and exquisite handmade embroideries.
Harper’s first exhibition was in 1987 at Pinacotheca in Melbourne and she was a leading member of the Store 5 artists’ group in Melbourne (1989–1993). Initially small in scale and simple in composition—as much due to economical as aesthetic considerations—her paintings have since increased in size and become more complex. Among those included in this survey are pared-back Constructivist paintings on wood from the late 1980s, mid-1990s works inspired by the decorative elements of Persian miniature painting, and recent large canvases which provide stunning new geometric and colour variations on her characteristic abstract themes.
Typically in Harper’s works, forms similar in type—blocks, stripes, circles, triangles or variants of these—are amassed together in striking compositions of seemingly endless variety, from the harmonious to the cacophonous. Harper builds upon early twentieth century abstraction and later generations of modernists—her intimate embroideries and screenprinted fabrics (produced with fellow artist Kerrie Poliness) paying particular homage to modernist women artists. Her investigations of colour and form are also intensely felt, visual responses to lived experience, embodying in her words ‘the act of looking, the obvious, the precise and the precious.’ ’]
Publishing details: Heide, 2015
Ref: 1000
Brassil Joanview full entry
Reference: Strangers - A Retrospective of Joan Brassil [’Strangers, a retrospective of distinguished UNSW Art & Design Alumni Joan Brassil at the Campbelltown Arts Centre.
Joan was an art teacher who decided to pursue her art practice, returned to study Sculpture at Alexander Mackie, now UNSW A&D, as a mature age student, and was a pioneer in the use of electronics in time-based environmental art and process art.  
Strangers: A retrospective of Joan Brassil will be the first major solo exhibition of Joan Brassil’s works, spanning her career in art, installation, and poetry. The exhibition also includes her exploration of  science and the environment, which aims to generate sensorial and emotional responses from the audience. The exhibition is supported by visual and written documentation that gives further insight into Brassil’s pioneering practice.
‘]
Publishing details: Campbelltown Arts Centre, 2015 (?)
Ref: 1000
Lincoln Kevinview full entry
Reference: Kevin Lincoln - Stone and Sea [Fully illustrated colour catalogue to accompany Kevin Lincoln's 2015 exhibition stone and sea at Niagara Galleries. All works are reproduced in full.]


Publishing details: Niagara Galleries, 2015
Ref: 1000
Australian furnitureview full entry
Reference: FAHY, Kevin, Christina SIMPSON, and Andrew SIMPSON. NINETEENTH CENTURY AUSTRALIAN FURNITURE. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Sydney, David Ell Press, 1985. Edition limited to 2000 copies. Folio, frontispiece, black & white and coloured illustrations, original cloth in dustwrapper.
Ref: 1009
NINETEENTH-CENTURY AUSTRALIAN SILVER view full entry
Reference: HAWKINS, J. B., NINETEENTH-CENTURY AUSTRALIAN SILVER
Publishing details: Woodbridge, Antique Collectors’ Club, 1990. Two volumes, quarto, full-page colour plates, numerous illustrations, a fine set, cloth, gilt, with dustwrappers, cloth slipcase.
Ref: 1000
Australian Photographyview full entry
Reference: SMITH, Dr. Julian. FIFTY MASTERPIECES OF PHOTOGRAPHY. Large folio, with introductory pamphlet and 50 loose black & white plates in publisher’s cloth-backed portfolio
Publishing details: Melbourne, 1948.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal rock artview full entry
Reference: Rock art of south-east Cape York by P. J. Trezise. Australian Aboriginal studies no. 24
Prehistory and material culture series no. 4

‘A seminal work on the rock art of the area with descriptions of the galleries’. Includes drawings and one photograph


 






by P. J. Trezise



Australian Aboriginal studies no. 24


Prehistory and material culture


series no. 4


A seminal work on the rock art of the area with descriptions of the galleries


includes drawings and one photograph


 

Illustrated with  drawings, 132 pages 



Publishing details: Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, 1971. Illustrated with  drawings, 132 pages 


Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: The beginners guide to Australian Aboriginal art - the symbols, their meanings and some dreamtime stories by R Lewis.
Publishing details: 2004
Ref: 1000
Clifton Marshallview full entry
Reference: Marshall Clifton
Marshall Clifton - Architect & Artist by B Chapman & D Richards.

[’Marshall Clifton was one of Western Australia's most respected and influential architects. He was also a highly talented artist.’]

Publishing details: Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1989. Softcover. 143 pages. Colour and b/w illus.
Ref: 1000
Johnson Georgeview full entry
Reference: George & Louis Johnson. Painter & poet

Essays by Terry Sturm and Gary Catalano on the important New Zealand poet and painter. The poems of Louis Johnson are complemented by illustrations by his brother.
Publishing details: Melbourne : 1995. Quarto, decorated cloth boards in a clamshell box, pp. 36, [28), illustrated. Frontispiece is an original signed painting by George Johnson housed in a glassine sleeve. The second edition, expanded from the first edition of 1994, with an original painting added,  limited to 40 copies signed by the artist.

Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: The etched work of Norman Lindsay

Catalogue for an exhibition held by the Fine Art Society, 8-21 April 1926. Includes a two page appreciation of Lindsay’s work and a list of 22 works with prices; the inside front and rear wrappers of this copy have original newspaper cuttings relating to the exhibition tipped-in
Publishing details: Melbourne : The Fine Art Society, 1926. Octavo, illustrated wrappers (lightly marked and with pale foxing), 8 pp (scattered foxing), [1] tipped-in black and white plate (fine).
Ref: 1000
Mythology and realityview full entry
Reference: Mythology and reality : contemporary Australian desert art from the Gabrielle Pizzi Collection by Geoffrey Bardon, Gabrielle Pizzi.

"The catalogue runs from right to left, in the Hebrew order" (contents page); a fine copy. This catalogue, for an exhibition staged in Jerusalem between 21 October and 19 December, 2003,  is unrecorded in Australian collections. It predates by one year the version published for the exhibition of the same name held at the Heide Museum of Modern Art in 2004
Publishing details: Jerusalem, Israel : The Jeruslam Centre for the Performing Arts, 2003. Square quarto, pictorial laminated card covers, 92 pp, illustrated in colour; text in English and Hebrew;
Ref: 1000
Australian Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see Mythology and reality : contemporary Australian desert art from the Gabrielle Pizzi Collection by Geoffrey Bardon, Gabrielle Pizzi.

"The catalogue runs from right to left, in the Hebrew order" (contents page); a fine copy. This catalogue, for an exhibition staged in Jerusalem between 21 October and 19 December, 2003,  is unrecorded in Australian collections. It predates by one year the version published for the exhibition of the same name held at the Heide Museum of Modern Art in 2004
Publishing details: Jerusalem, Israel : The Jeruslam Centre for the Performing Arts, 2003. Square quarto, pictorial laminated card covers, 92 pp, illustrated in colour; text in English and Hebrew;
Lindsay Lionelview full entry
Reference: Exhibition of water-colour drawings by Lionel Lindsay. “Spain as I knew it,” catalogue of 37 works. 
Publishing details: London : P. & D. Colnaghi & Co. Ltd., 1938. Octavo, exhibition catalogue, folded card,
Ref: 1000
Wantrup Jonathanview full entry
Reference: Australian rare books 1788 - 1900 by Jonathon Wantrup. includes: ‘First News from Botany Bay . (The "London Chronicle" Account of the Foundation of Australia in 1788, edited by Jonathan Wantrup).

The deluxe edition is specially bound in slipcase, and includes the additional volume 'First news from Botany Bay : the 'London Chronicle' account of the foundation of Australia in 1788'. 
Publishing details: Sydney : Hordern House, 1987. Two volumes, octavo, gilt-lettered cloth, slipcase, vol. 1 pp. x; 168; vol. 2 pp. 32; a fine set. The deluxe edition, each volume limited to 125 copies signed by the author.
Ref: 1000
Jorgenson Jorgen 1780-1841view full entry
Reference: Jorgenson : a shred of autobiography.
Also titled: The progress of a convict.
First published in two parts in Ross's Hobart town almanack, 1835 (Ferguson no. 2021) and in Hobart town almanack, 1838 (Ferguson no. 2520). 
One of the most colourful characters in Australia's convict history, the Danish adventurer Jorgen Jorgenson first visited Australia in the years 1801-1805, arriving at Port Jackson as a sailor aboard the Harbinger. He was then transferred to the HMS Lady Nelson and probably sailed with Flinders in 1802, visiting Port Phillip and Van Diemen's Land. After returning to Denmark he fought against the Royal Navy in the Anglo-Danish War, captaining a privateer. Following his capture and eventual release in London, he sailed to Iceland and staged a daring coup d'état with the help of an English crew, proclaiming Iceland's independence from Denmark and himself as governor of the island. His Icelanic regime lasted only nine weeks. Returning to England, he spent the next ten years in and out of prison due to alcohol and gambling problems, but was also employed as an English spy. Sentenced to death in 1820 for theft, he was eventually transported for life to Van Diemen's Land in 1826. Jorgenson very soon gained a ticket-of-leave and was employed by the Van Diemen's Land Company, actively involved in the exploration of the north and west of Tasmania and the notorious clearances of Aborigines. He received an official pardon in 1830.
Publishing details:  Adelaide : Sullivan's Cove, 1981. Edition limited to 375 numbered copies (no. 94). Narrow quarto, publisher's blue cloth in dust jacket, title-page with colour portrait of Jorgenson, 96 pp,
Ref: 1000
Jorgenson Jorgen 1780-1841view full entry
Reference: from ADB: There are two known likenesses of Jorgenson. The first, an oil painting by C. W. Eckersberg, probably done in 1808, is in the National Historical Museum, Hilleröd, Denmark. The second, a small grotesque-humorous oil painting in the National Museum of Iceland, Reykjavik, is regarded as a self-portrait or self-caricature.
Jorgenson Jorgen 1780-1841view full entry
Reference: from DAAO: Jorgen Jorgenson b. 7 April 1780. Also known as Jorgen Jorgensen.
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Painter)
Colonial-era sketcher, painter, naval officer, and author, among other things, he lived in Van Diemen's Land variously as a convict and a free man. He illustrated books with his own crudely drawn, yet highly imaginative, black and white neo-classical sketches. painter and (in his own words) 'monarch of Iceland, naval captain, revolutionist, British diplomatic agent, author, dramatist, preacher, political prisoner, gambler, hospital dispenser, continental traveller, explorer, editor, expatriated exile, and colonial constable’, was born in Copenhagen, Denmark on 7 April 1780, second son of Jorgen Jorgensen, a mathematical instrument-maker, and Anna Lette née Bruun. In 1817 Jorgen altered the spelling of his surname to Jorgenson.
Jorgenson went to sea at the age of 15. In 1801 he joined the Lady Nelson which carried out surveying work on the Australian coast as tender to Matthew Flinders’s Investigator . In 1803 the Lady Nelson sailed to Van Diemen’s Land to assist in the formation of a settlement there. After further surveying expeditions, Jorgenson left the navy to work as a whaler and sealer in Tasmanian and New Zealand waters, returning to England in February 1805. He subsequently went back to Copenhagen and commanded the privateer Admiral Juul during the Anglo-Danish war, surrendering to the English in March 1808. In June 1809, having visited Iceland with a shipload of provisions for the settlers, Jorgenson arrested the Danish governor and declared Iceland independent of Denmark with himself head of government. Two months later he sailed for England, where he was arrested and confined to a hulk at Chatham.
After his release Jorgenson fell into a life of gambling and drinking, varied by adventures at sea, a period spent as an agent for the British (1815-17) and intermittent confinements in prison. Finally he was sentenced to transportation for life and arrived at Van Diemen’s Land in April 1826. He worked first as a convict-clerk, then as an explorer for the Van Diemen’s Land Company. He received his ticket of leave in June 1827 and the following year was appointed a convict-constable of the field police in the Oatlands district. He gained his conditional pardon in June 1830. The following year he married Norah Cobbett (Corbett), an illiterate and alcoholic convict with an Irish farming background. Jorgenson continued to pursue a variety of careers, including those of farmer, constable, scribe and journalist. He and his wife were granted absolute pardons in 1835. Norah died in 1840, Jorgen on 20 April 1841 in the Colonial Hospital, Hobart Town.
Jorgenson wrote prolifically throughout his life, publishing religious works, travelogues, histories, autobiographical material and pamphlets on colonial affairs. Five volumes of unpublished manuscripts (Egerton Collection, British Museum) include his allegorical and partially autobiographical The Adventures of Thomas Walker , dedicated to Sir William Hooker and composed during Jorgenson’s confinement in London after his return from Iceland. This is illustrated by his own crudely drawn, yet highly imaginative, black and white neo-classical sketches. The most prosaic, A Floating Prison , shows the prison hulk Bahama in which the author was confined at Chatham; Incidents at an Iceland Ball depicts a bald society lady, her wig having been swept from her head while dancing. Two allegorical sketches, Jorgenson in Captivity and Jorgenson Free , illustrate a dream in which the former monarch saw himself bowed down before the altar of Tyranny and Oppression and subsequently released by the Goddess of Liberty who, armed with a thunderbolt from Jove, destroys the altar and its priest. Hogan suggests that this was intended to inspire efforts by Hooker and other friends to secure his release. His strangest allegorical image depicts Sir Joseph Banks (with whom Jorgenson had dealings on Icelandic affairs) plucking naked children from the sea, symbolising the botanist’s rescue of the arts and sciences forced by revolution to flee from the Continent.
No drawings are known from Jorgenson’s period in Australia but there is some evidence that he continued to take an interest in the visual arts. In a letter to Hooker dated 4 December 1840, Jorgenson wrote with contempt of the naturalist and explorer John Lhotsky who, he claimed, had commissioned drawings of fish from a Port Arthur convict (probably William Buelow Gould ) then pretended that they were his own work. Jorgenson’s manuscript History of the Black War in Van Diemen’s Land – an ignominious event in which he played a prominent part – was presented to (Archdeacon) Thomas Braim, who subsequently gave it to James Bonwick to assist him in compiling The Last Tasmanians (which quoted from the text). It is possible that this manuscript, now lost, included some sketches.
A small and peculiar self-portrait in oils, perhaps intended as a bitter caricature with allegorical overtones, is in the National Museum of Iceland, Reykjavik, while a more conventional oil portrait of Jorgenson by C.W. Eckersberg, thought to date from 1808, is in the National Historical Museum, Hillerød, Denmark. Portrait heads of Jorgenson and his wife are believed to be among the keystones carved by the convicts Daniel Herbert and James Colbeck on Ross Bridge, Tasmania.
Writers:
Staff Writer
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
2011
Rankin Marjorieview full entry
Reference: Australian holiday by Alec and Catherine King, illustrated by Marjorie Rankin.

With Rankin's beautiful full-page colour illustrations of Australian native animals and line drawings in the text. Muir 3918.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Georgian House, 1945. First edition. Oblong quarto, publisher's cloth backed pictorial boards (upper board a little worn at the corners and with pale foxing at the upper corner), 105 pp,
Ref: 1000
Leason Percyview full entry
Reference: Here is faery, illustrations and decorations by Percy Leason
FURNLEY MAURICE, pseud. [WILMOT, Frank Leslie]; NEWMARCH, R.L.; LEASON, Percy (illustrator)


Publishing details: Melbourne : George Robertson & Co., 1914. First edition. Small quarto, publisher's quarter cloth over illustrated boards (sunned), title label to spine, front free-endpaper with ownership inscription of Edna F. Davy dated 1914 (the stated copyright date is 1915!), 112 pp, with 5 tipped-in colour plates and monochrome illustrations and decorations throughout.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidney (1917-1992)view full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan, numerous plates, essays. Text in Japanese.
Publishing details: Tokyo : Fuji Television Gallery, 1973. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, unpaginated,
Ref: 1000
Nolan Cynthia and Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Paradise, and yet by Cynthia Nolan. Cover panel by Sidney Nolan.

Publishing details: London : Macmillan, 1971. Octavp, boards in dustjacket, pp. 160. Nolan's writings on New Guinea.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Cynthiaview full entry
Reference: Outback by Cynthia Nolan

The dustjacket, endpapers and illustrations are by the author's husband, Sidney Nolan.
Publishing details: London : Methuen, 1962. Octavo, boards in dustjacket pp. 222, numerous photographic illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Cynthiaview full entry
Reference: Open negative : an American memoir by Cynthia Nolan

illustrated by Sidney Nolan.
Publishing details: London : Macmillan, 1967. Octavo, boards in dustjacket (sealed tear), pp. 225,
Ref: 1000
Nolan Cynthiaview full entry
Reference: A sight of China by Cynthia Nolan, with illustrations by Sidney Nolan
Publishing details: London : Macmillan, 1969. Octavo, boards in dustjacket (light wear), pp. 165,
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan, essay by Robert Melville. Text in German.
Publishing details: Zurich : Marlborough Galerie AG, 1973. Oktober - November 1973. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 46,
Ref: 1000
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman , includes biography on Blackman in both English and Japanese languages, five colour plates with English and Japanese language titles, an essay on the artist in Japanese language, 23 black & white plates of Blackman's paintings, catalogue of 28 works,
Publishing details: Tokyo : Fuji Television Gallery, 1973. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 40, foreword in Japanese language, black & white reproduction with yellow toning of a photograph of Blackman,
Ref: 1000
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: The Lady and the Unicorn (signed)
BOYD, Arthur (1920 - 1999) and PORTER, Peter (1929 - 2010)

‘A magnificent suite of narrative artworks by Arthur Boyd, arguably Australia's most expressive painter, and Peter Porter, acclaimed Australian poet.
Boyd was a founding member of the Antipodeans, and in his early years in Melbourne painted a number of series of revolutionarily modernist paintings which challenged the art establishment while at the same time bringing him commercial recognitiion and lasting popular appeal. Boyd represented Australian at the Venice Bienalle in 1958, and spent just over ten years living in London working on major series such as this one. From the 1970s Boyd and his family fell in love with the Bundanon region on the Shoalhaven River in New South Wales, and over twenty years purchased a series of properties along its banks which would form the basis of a major gift to the Australian people in 1993.
Porter was born in Brisbane in 1929 and upon emigration to England in 1951 was known as one of the most respected expatriate Australian figures of the literary world. Porter's published works number in the several dozen, and amongst other awards was recognised with the Duff Cooper Memorial Prize (1983); Whitbread Poetry Award (1988); Australian Literature Society Gold Medal (1990); Age Book of the Year Poetry Prize (1997, 2009) and the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry (2002). He also judged the Man Booker Prize in 1983.
In total the artist and poet worked on four collaborations, Jonah (1973); The Lady and the Unicorn (1975); Narcissus (1984) and Mars (1988), of which trade editions of books were published of each series. For The Lady and the Unicorn, Porter's text which explains the imagery can be found in the trade edition (published in London by Secker & Warburg in 1975). Dr Janet McKenzie writes of the Unicorn series in 'Studio International' accessed via the web : http://www.studiointernational.com/index.php/peter-porter-1929-2010-an-appreciation-through-an-examination-of-his-collaborative-projects-with-arthur-boyd-1920-1999
In the writing of their second collaborative work, The Lady and the Unicorn (1975), which had been suggested by Georges Mora, owner of Tolarno Gallery, Melbourne, Porter reveals that neither he nor Arthur Boyd saw the famous tapestries in the Musée de Cluny in Paris until after they had completed their own interpretation of the myth, though Porter at least had seen some reproductions of it. Unable to find adequate authentic information on the subject, Porter says, “I made up much of the material myself”, though including in the epilogue, imagery similar to that of the Cluny tapestries.
The myth of the Lady and the Unicorn tells of an Emperor who collected animals. He orders his officials to arrange for every kind of creature to be collected into his menagerie. As time goes by he becomes more fanatical about possessing every type of real and imaginary animal but still he has no unicorn. This mythical creature is believed to live in the region but no matter how hard they try to devise traps for it, they are unsuccessful. Meanwhile, the Unicorn falls in love with a young lady. For some time they are happy together but the Lady becomes bored and betrays the Unicorn to agents of the Emperor. Following its capture, the unicorn dies in prison.
The moral of the story is that acquisitiveness leads to disappointment, if not to wanton destruction although Boyd and Porter focussed their attention on the changing relationship between the Lady and the Unicorn, rather than the acquisitive Emperor. The final product was a unified body of work, a book of twenty poems, each faced by a large-scale etching. Porter himself felt that he achieved “the necessary virtuosity” in The Hunters Set out to trap the Unicorn, and was pleased with “the chic irony” of The Unicorn before the Emperor; his parody of Auden in The Lady’s Wedding, and “imaginative prose writing” in Death of the Unicorn. Continuing his assessment of their combined work, he writes, “Boyd’s pictures are striking in every sense. Each picture is white on intense black and the mastery of sheer line and complexity of drawing is virtuosic, surpassed in Boyd’s work only by the similar extravagance of his pictures for Narcissus”. The Lady and the Unicorn is a major series of narrative artworks being the collaboration of the talents of two of Australia's greatest artists and poets. A suite of original etchings were published alongside this trade edition.’ From Doug;as Stewart Fine Books.
Publishing details: London : Secker & Warburg, 1975. Quarto, cloth in illustrated dustjacket, plates and text. Limited to 1000 copies signed and numbered by Boyd and Porter.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: The voyage and other versions of poems by Baudelaire. Illustrated by Sidney Nolan.
[

Publishing details: London : Faber and Faber, 1968. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, 60 pp, illustrated with numerous full page plates.
Ref: 1000
Dean Tamaraview full entry
Reference: TAMARA DEAN - Catalogue planned for mid-2016. Book to accompany a travelling exhibition of Tamara’s work.
Publishing details: Piper Press, 2016
Ref: 1000
Hall Fionaview full entry
Reference: FIONA HALL - When my boat comes in.
Planned for 2016
When my boat comes in is the title of a work by Fiona Hall that is included in the 2015 Venice Biennale exhibition. A few parts of this work are in the Wrong Way Time catalogue and Piper Press are hoping to release the book of the entire series in 2016.
Publishing details: 2016, ISBN 9780975190180
Ref: 1000
Andrew Brookview full entry
Reference: Brook Andrew - Theme Park, by Marcia Langton, Brook Andrew took over the entire AAMU Museum in the Netherlands for six months in 2009, filling it with 19th-century depictions of Aborigines alongside his large inflatable Wiradjuri-clad clowns, Aboriginal sculptures, kitsch souvenirs and neon lights, and this book is a catalogue of his intervention.
Publishing details: Piper Press, A Gardner hardback, 2010 (?)
Ref: 1000
Piccinini Patriciaview full entry
Reference: PATRICIA PICCININI
Nearly Beloved by Helen McDonald

The first major publication on Patricia Piccinini, one of Australia’s most celebrated artists ever since her Young Family exhibition caused a sensation at the 1993 Venice Biennale. Piccinini creates an imaginative world peopled with families of charming and slightly unsettling beings. There are mutants who are half human and half beast, baby trucks and humanized scooters, sentient lumps of flesh and delicious bits of car. This book reproduces and discusses all Piccinini’s major works.
Publishing details: ISBN 9780975190166, hardback, 180 pp, 300 x 250mm
Ref: 1000
Gittoes Georgeview full entry
Reference: George Gittoes - I Witness. [’The first major survey in Australia of the work of leading Australian artist and filmmaker George Gittoes... I Witness presented a chronological journey of Gittoes’ 40-year career with a body of work that included paintings, drawings, and artist diaries from the fields of war, as well as installation and film. The exhibition documented sites of cultural conflict including Nicaragua and the Philippines in the 1980s, Rwanda, Cambodia and the Middle East in the 1990s, and more recently Pakistan, Iraq, and Afghanistan... I Witness explored the capacity of figurative art to address issues of an ethical, if not spiritual, nature where the question of being human is starkly framed in the context of war and terrorism. Gittoes' images are stark, confronting, demanding and illuminating as they appeal to the viewer’s capacity for compassion and justice. The curator Rod Pattenden said: “This is not idealist exhibition of art about art, but a record of an artist wild with vision for the capacity of art to create change in the real world of the viewer. It is sometimes shocking, always provocative and clearly a unique visual experience. Gittoes steps outside a safe role for an artist and creates images of stunning power in some of the most difficult places on earth.” Gittoes career focuses not so much on war, but on the larger questions of the nature of peace making and human politics as well as the individual stories of the people he encounters. His films feature sharply drawn characters and his drawings and paintings, are alive with the grotesque and fantastic. He has an eye for transformation and hopeful change in the most appalling situations. He demonstrates art's capacity to address the conditions of human horror. Gittoes uses every means at his disposal to enable the viewer to become an eyewitness to this story. He is a unique and important Australian artist with an international profile. An impressive monograph that includes essays by the late Bernard Smith and David Ross, former Director of the Whitney Museum, New York accompanied the exhibition.I Witness took the viewer on a journey that began in the late 1960s with Gittoes’ establishment of the Yellow House in Potts Point, Sydney. It then followed his studio around the globe over a 45 year period featuring over 90 works including 6 films. In 2011, the journey returned to the Yellow House, but this time to Jalalabad in the Pashtun-dominated region south of Afghanistan. Inspired by the original Yellow House it features a cinema, travelling tent circus, rainbow-painting studios, and Secret Garden Cafe and Rose Theatre outdoor stages. It was also the location for Gittoes recent return in 2014 to film Snow Monkey. 





Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Galler, 2014, pb, 130pp
Benjamin Jasonview full entry
Reference: Jason Benjamin : Everyone is here. 12 December – 25 January 2015. [’The paintings and drawings are a distillation of deep-felt encounters around distinct landscape sites, where the artist has concentrated his energies on shaping a pared-back vision of light and space.  These exceptionally fine works bear witness to Benjamin’s disciplined scrutiny of topography, vegetation and climate as well as environmental concerns. Yet, what sets these works apart is the poetic metamorphosis that can only take place in the solitude of the studio.  ’]

Publishing details: Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, (etc) 2015
Ref: 1000
Shen Jiaweiview full entry
Reference: From Mao to Now 1961 - 2010 [’Catalog of an exhibition held at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery & Arts Centre, 16 October - 28 November 2010.
Catalogue includes an essay by Shen Jiawei originally published in "Art and China's revolution= Yi shu yu Zhong Guo ge ming." Includes bibliographical references (p. 121-127). Includes some bibliographical references in Chinese.’]
Publishing details: Gymea, N.S.W. : Hazelhurst Regional Gallery & Arts Centre, 2010 
127 p. : col. ill., ports. ; 27 cm. 
Ref: 1000
Seton Alexanderview full entry
Reference: Roughing Out [’The Roughing Out: Alex Seton catalogue focuses on the new body of work the Sydney based artist created for his Hazelhurst exhibition.

Roughing Out was a first for Seton as he broke away from his usual hyper-real, finely carved marble sculptures and focused not so much on the finished object but on the sense of process. The exhibition explored the raw material of marble and the expectations of traditional carving practice through video, sculpture and performance.  Sculpture and video works were presented alongside a series of unexpected installations made from dust and recycled marble waste.’]
Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Gallery, 2013, hc, 96pp
Ref: 1000
Kovacs Ildikoview full entry
Reference: Ildiko Kovacs Down the Line 1980-2010 [’This catalogue focuses on Kovacs’ paintings, showing the continuous unfolding of a remarkable talent. Throughout her career, Kovac  has maintained an intensely physical, non-verbal, non-conceptual relationship with media and imagery.’] [curated by Daniel Mudie Cunningham. Essays by Cunningham and Terence Maloon. [’The sumptuous catalogue of a major survey exhibition. Kovacs won the $80,000 Bulgari Art Award in 2015.’]’]
Publishing details: Gymea. Hazelhurst Regional Gallery. 2011. Oblong 4to. or.cl. with design from a Kovacs painting. 128pp. b/w ills. and many colour plates. Fine. 1st ed. Scarce. Edition of 1,000 copies. Hardcover.
Ref: 1000
Rankin Davidview full entry
Reference: Enniskillen: Recent Work of David Rankin. [’An exhibition of recent work by David Rankin which confronts Ireland's 1982 Remembrance Day attacks.

The Enniskillen paintings and murals integrate photographic news images from the 1987 bombings on to black paper with paint. The brushstrokes emulate ash, dust and ruin making the images appear to be shroud in a cloud of dust. Rankin grapples not only with the chaos of the shattered buildings and the scatter of human victims, but with his own Irish heritage. Rankin’s father, who is from Enniskillen, lost two family members during the bombing. In this moving series of works, Rankin attempts to reconcile his history and heritage.’]
Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2011
Ref: 1000
Solness Peterview full entry
Reference: Illuminated Landscape by Peter Solness. [’Peter Solness has been a published photographer for 35 years. He has had a long and distinguished career as a photojournalist. Since 2009 Peter has specialised in night-photography.’]
Publishing details: self-published, 80pp
Ref: 1000
Australian quiltmakersview full entry
Reference: Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015. Curated by Louise Mitchell. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Gibson Marionview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Hooworth Judyview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Hannaford Mary Janeview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Fitzroy Lady Maryview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Josephson Frederica Maryview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Doig Adrienneview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Woods familyview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Staniforth Amy Susannaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Brown Christinaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Bate Claraview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Irvine-Nealie Janview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Sullivan Carolynview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Fitzsimons Pamelaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Brown Ameliaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Wilbow Sophiaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Gibson Marionview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Smith Janeview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
McDermott Judyview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Grogan Lucasview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Lavery Gillianview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Annetts Maryview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
West Carolyn Maryview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
do Prado Paulaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
von Mengerson Belindaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Peters Emmaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
von Mengerson Belindaview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
James Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Williams Gladysview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Bingley Florrieview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Bingley Florrieview full entry
Reference: see Australian quiltmakers - ‘Labours of Love: Australian Quilts 1845 - 2015’. [’An exhibition featuring over 30 stunning hand crafted textiles made in NSW from the mid 1800s to the present day. Presenting some of the finest examples of quilts made in Australia including spectacular heritage quilts on loan from the National Gallery of Australia, the Powerhouse Museum, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), Australian War Memorial and the National Museum of Australia as well as select examples from regional museums. The quilts and patchworks have been created for comfort and show, commemorate historical events and family occasions, and reveal social histories and personal stories. Made by women and treasured in families as objects of value, the heritage quilts have been handed down through the generations before they were acquired and preserved in public collections.’]

Publishing details: Hazelhurst Regional Art Gallery, 2015, pb, 68pp
Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013.view full entry
Reference: Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Albert Tonyview full entry
Reference: TONY ALBERT - Edited by Art & Australia
[’Tony Albert is a comprehensive survey of the extraordinary oeuvre of contemporary Australian artist Tony Albert. Featuring a foreword by Hetti Perkins and an in-depth interview with the artist by notable curator Maura Reilly, the book explores the complex conceptual undercurrent that pervades Albert’s work. Colour reproductions of the works, from photographs to largescale installations, reveal the artist’s ongoing interrogation of the politics of colonisation and the flagrant injustices that are still faced by indigenous Australians today.’] [’"Tony Albert is a comprehensive survey of the extraordinary oeuvre of contemporary Australian artist Tony Albert. Featuring a foreword by Hetti Perkins and an in-depth interview with the artist by notable curator Maura Reilly, the book explores the complex conceptual undercurrent that pervades Albert's work. Colour reproductions of the works, from photographs to largescale installations, reveal the artist's ongoing interrogation of the politics of colonisation and the flagrant injustices that are still faced by indigenous Australians today." - NLA website.’]
Publishing details: Published by Dott Books, April 2015
Pages: 84
Ref: 1000
Barton Del Katherineview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Mangan Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Howard Astraview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Marburg Amandaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Ou Selinaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Jones Johnathanview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
de Vietri Christianview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Lynch Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Ussher Michelleview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
McHaffie Robview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Dawson Louisaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Ryder Gilesview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Hilton Markview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Johnson Helenview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Stevens Grantview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Yamani Jamilview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Keating Ashview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Hughes Saraview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Bush Kushanaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Skrzypczak Noelview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Maisie Jordanaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Kregar Gregorview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Madden Peterview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Jacobs Susanview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Fraser Chantalview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Foster Pat & Jen Bereanview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
White Emmaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Ryan Sarahview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Nelson Peterview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
McGregor Laithview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Baumann Rebeccaview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Polo Tomview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
McLuckie Alasdairview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Salt Brittview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Francis Patrickview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Woodward Timview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Woodward Timview full entry
Reference: see Art & Australia collection awards projects 2003-2013. Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name held at Newcastle Art Gallery, 8 December 2012 - 17 February 2013 and 5 other regional venues. Celebrating the last ten years of ARTAND Australia’s history, this book tracks the emerging artist and writer programs, and charts the artist, education and community collaborations. With an essay by Max Delany and a foreword by Ron Ramsey, the catalogue accompanied a regional tour of the ARTAND Australia Emerging Artist Collection, which began at Newcastle Art Gallery in 2012. Includes short essays on artists.
Publishing details: Art and Australia, 2012, pb, 137 pages : some colour illustrations
Chapman Andrew photographerview full entry
Reference: Political Vision - A Photographic Journey Through Australian Politics by Andrew Chapman. [’Political Vision provides a behind-the-scenes view of Australian politics from the 1970s to 2000s, from Whitlam to Abbott, framing the past in a series of unforgettable images, and providing an unflinching look at the election process while reflecting upon the changing face of the political landscape in Australia.
'Those who were there will be reminded in an instant, not only of the men but of an era, and of a drama whose last act had yet to be played out. Those who weren't there, but who want to know what it was like, will find in those photographs a fertile place to start.' - Don Watson

Foreword by Don Watson.

About the Author

Andrew Chapman came of age in the early 1970s and it was during this turbulent era in Australian politics that he first raised his camera to the political stage, rarely lowering it in the succeeding forty years. Political photography became one of his most enduring passions, and the fruits of his labours were featured in magazines and newspapers across the nation.’]
Publishing details: 2015
Ref: 1000
Polish artists in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Polish artists in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Galaska-Gietka Mariaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Genek Zdzislawview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Golda Agnieszkaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Luzny Krystynaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Groblicka Lidiaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Michalska Danutaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Murawski Tadeusz Tedview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Pyrz-Romanyk Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Rypinska Kingaview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Tuszynski Felixview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Wojak AnAview full entry
Reference: see Roses and red earth : Polish folk art in Australia / Maria Wrońska-Friend. A Touring Exhibition 2000-2001. Essays by Aleksamder Jackowski, Jerzy Smolicz and Maria Wrońska-Friend. Includes some artists profiles. Also Titled Polish folk art in Australia
Publishing details: Perc Tucker Regional Gallery
Published South Yarra, Vic. : Macmillan Art Pub., c2000, 127 p. : col. ill. ; 20 x 23 cm.
Sculptures of Melbourneview full entry
Reference: Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [to be indexed fully] [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Australian sculptureview full entry
Reference: see Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Montford Paul view full entry
Reference: see numerous references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Allen Georgeview full entry
Reference: see 3 references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Anderson Wallaceview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Armstrong Bruceview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ball Percivalview full entry
Reference: see 2 references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bartlett Geoffreyview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Baskerville Margaretview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bass Tomview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Bowles William Leslieview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Cohn Olaview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Dadswell Lyndonview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Dall’Ava Augustineview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Lynch Daniel Junky Projectsview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Lynch Daniel Junky Projectsview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Durrant Ivanview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
de Lacy George architectview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Hamilton Joseph sculptor view full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ewers Rayview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Fay Biancaview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Spicer Timview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Spicer Timview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Floyd Emilyview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Foley Fionaview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Gilbert Webview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Greener Isaacview full entry
Reference: see a reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Gilbert Webview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ilton Nickview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Juraszek Paulview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Kelly Johnview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
King Ingeview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Laumen Louisview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Lee Penelopeview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Lee Penelopeview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Mackennal Bertramview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Meadmore Clementview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Meszaros Michaelview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Morton Callum view full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Murray-White Cliveview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
O’Connor Ailsaview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Parr Lentonview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Pryor Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Quinn Lorettaview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Quinn Paulview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Redpath Normaview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Reynolds Chrisview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Laumen Louisview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Richardson Charles Douglasview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Ringholt Stuartview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robb Charlesview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robertson-Swann Ronview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robertson-Swann Ronview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Robinson John Edwardview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Scarce Yhonnieview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Scarce Yhonnieview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Skipper Matchamview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Stimson Mary Perrottview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Summers Charlesview full entry
Reference: see several references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Weaver Alisonview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
White Jamesview full entry
Reference: see references in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
Zananiri Saryview full entry
Reference: see reference in Sculptures of Melbourne by Mark S. Holsworth [’Melbourne has an impressive number of sculptures on public display throughout the city. Just wander Melbourne's city streets, gardens and laneways and you will undoubtedly find some magnificent public sculptures - from historical and religious icons to playful literary and social figures – all with rich historical weight.
The book Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues.’] [’Sculptures of Melbourne explores major changes in the nature of public sculpture. When Melbourne was established, sculpture was heavily influenced by the colonial legacy of neo-classical bronze and marble statues. From 1980 onwards, public sculpture changed dramatically, not only in style but in materials, location and sheer numbers. This book tells the story of how the shifting trends in public sculpture moved from a classical style, to commemorative, to a corporate modernist style, to being integrated into urban design, and finally evolving into a contemporary style, which is non-traditional and temporary. The history includes controversial modernist sculptures such as The Yellow Peril and unofficial laneway installation works. The book is written in an easy accessible style and is also a pictorial essay of Melbourne's sculptures. The Author: Mark S. Holsworth is a writer, art critic and artist who lives in Melbourne. He has written plays, short stories and authors a long-running blog: Black Mark’]
Publishing details: Melbourne Books, 2015, hc, 220 pages : colour illustrations. Includes bibliographical references (pages 208-215) and index.
expatriate Australian artists
view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Australian art 1950s 1960sview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Robertson Bryanview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Whitechapel Gallery Londonview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Davidview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lynn Elwynview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Miller Godfreyview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
James Louisview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Friedeberger Klausview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hodgkinson Frankview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Coleman Alannahview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Underhill Tony 1923-77view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Richmond Oliffeview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lymburner Francisview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Smith Bernardview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hessing Leonardview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Russell Ronview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Humphries Barryview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Gleghorn Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pratt Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Campbell Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lindsay Darylview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dargie Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dickerson Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rutherford Megview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Poignant Alex and Roslynview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Juniper Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Freeman Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Bellette Jeanview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cant Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Smith Jack Carington view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Heysen Noraview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Missingham Halview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Thornton Wallaceview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Wilson Ericview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Passmore Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Haefliger Paulview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Willliams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Klippel Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Chapman Doraview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Redfern Gallery Londonview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Australian Artists Association in London 1950sview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Finlay Donaldview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brodzky Horaceview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brodzky Horace p52view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Annois Lenview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Armstrong Ianview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Armstrong Warwickview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brodzky Horaceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cant Jamesview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cavalier Bruceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Clarke Rodview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cobb J Cview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Colahan Colinview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Craig Geoffreyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dalgarno Royview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dyring Moyaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Finley Donaldview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Fleischmann Arthurview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Flower Cedricview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Flugelman Herbertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Giles Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Glass Peterview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Green Leonard Jamesview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Grieve Robert Hview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Horsely Malcolmview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ingham Alanview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Jones Geoffview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lempriere Helenview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
O’Connell Michaelview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pirie Margaret Macdonaldview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Richmond Oliffeview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Risi Mittyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Sainthill Loudonview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Strachan Davidview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Savage D Percivalview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Solling Wendyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Taylor John Hview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Underhill Tonyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Veal Haywardview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brilliant Fredaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Becket Knight F Aview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Blayney Peterview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cameron Eview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Courier Jview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cavalier Eview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dargie Kathleenview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dargie Williamview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Edion Henryview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Fabian Erwinview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ferrier Fview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Friedeberger Klausview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Friend Donaldview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Grey Normaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Harris Rolfview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Harrison Daryl Hillview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hawkin Sheila or Hawkinsview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hodges Madgeview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hodgkinson Frankview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hole Quentinview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hutchinson N Mview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Justelius H V view full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Kahan Louisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Keene Shirleyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Klem Louiseview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Black Romanview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Anderson Louiseview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brabant Rosemaryview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Bressler B Pview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Bruce Davidview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cram Pview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Dutton Orlandoview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Eyre Ellisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Findlay Ivyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Griffiths Valdaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Kahan Louisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Kemble Herbertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Keynes A Sview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Knight Fview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Kroch-Frishman Mview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lindsey L Bview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lymburner Francisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Mendick Joannaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Miley Graceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
de Monchaux Paulview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Morgan W Dview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
O’Neill Valerieview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pearcey Eileenview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pike Margaretview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Richie Paulview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Stewart Dorothyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Smith Virginiaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Sweet Joanview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tayler Laurieview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Teague Violetview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Traill J C Aview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Trengrove Barryview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tribe Barbaraview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Walkley Eview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Warner Eview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Warren Guyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Wilson Marjorieview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. List of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Kmit Michaelview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lloyd Murielview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
McCauley Centiview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
McGowan Robertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Moore Alanview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Oliver Torfridaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ogburn Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Paul Constanceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pike Margaretview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Prendiville Lornaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ritchard Edgarview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Roberts Warwickview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ryan Rosemaryview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rydge Albertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rydge Albert liwted as Albert Ridge?view full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Stephen Pamelaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Stocker Neilview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Stones Margaretview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Storey Eview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Strawbridge Alanview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tremills Pegview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
West Edwardview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
White Margaret Mview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Australian Artists Association in London in the 1950s. see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Lists of exhibitors in the AAA is given on p52-5.
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Salkauskas Henryview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Fluke Royview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Coburn Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hughes Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
McInnes Colin criticview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Plate Carlview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Treweeke Vernonview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cook William Delafieldview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Upward Peterview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lanceley Colinview full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Antipodean Manifestoview full entry
Reference: reprinted in Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Morrow Ross p150view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Laycock Donald p150view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Davis George p150view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Grey-Smith Guy p150view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Ostoia-Kotkowski Stan p150view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
O’Brien Justin p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Robinson Max p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rapotec Stanislav p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rose William p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Sibley Andrew p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Sime Dawn p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Sime Ian p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Smith Frances p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Thompson Francis Roy p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Thompson Tom p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Trenerry Horace p151view full entry
Reference: see Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Baily Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Davidview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Carbins Malcolmview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Coburn Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
James Louisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Hessing Leonardview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Jick Jacquelineview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lynn Elwynview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Plate Carlview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Pugh Cliftonview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Underhill Anthonyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Walpole Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: exhibited at Commonwealth Art Today exhibition, Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 22 Australian artists and title of the one work exhibited see p170 Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Hermiaview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one sculpture at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 4 Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p217 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Richmond Oliffeview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one sculpture at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 4 Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p217 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rutherford Megview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one sculpture at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 4 Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p217 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Stocker Neilview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one sculpture at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. Commonwealth Institute, London, 1962. For list of 4 Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p217 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Boyd Davidview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cook William Delafieldview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Daws Lawrenceview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Cook James Wview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
French Leonardview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Friedeberger Klausview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Horsely Malcolmview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Howley Johnview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
James Louisview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Jessop Clytieview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Johnson Michaelview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Lempriere Helenview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
McGillick Tonyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Robinson Maxview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Rowell Kennethview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Treweeke Vernonview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Underhill Tonyview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Upward Peterview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: exhibited at least one work at exhibition held at the New Metropole Arts Centre, Folkstone, and the Stadelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt. For list of Australian artists and titles of works exhibited see p215-6 of Australian art and artists in London 1950 - 1965: an Antipodean Summer by Simon Pierse. Includes significant biographical information on Australian artists working in London. [’Contents: Foreword; Sir Kenneth Clark: deus ex machina of Australian art; A miserable climate; Australian artists in London, c.1930–50; Australian art and artists in the new Elizabethan age; Bryan Robertson, director of the Whitechapel Gallery; Antipodeans, abstractionists and the quest for an exhibition in London; Recent Australian Painting at the Whitechapel gallery; A horse designed by a committee: Australian Painting – Colonial – Impressionist – Contemporary; Flag of convenience: Australian art and the Commonwealth; Australian artists in early 1960s London; Australian painting and Sculpture in Europe Today; Comings and goings in the mid-1960s; Conclusion; Appendix; Select bibliography; Index.’]
Publishing details: Ashgate, 2012 hc, 314pp including index.
May Philview full entry
Reference: Phil May’s Gutter-Snipes, 
50 Original pen & ink Sketches

Publishing details: Leadenhall press, london
hardback book, copyright 1896
Ref: 1009
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: Painter in Paradise, S H Ervin Gallery exhibition catalogue, curated by Natalie Wilson. Exhibithon by National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery 29 May - 12 July 2015 Sydney.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 114-119)
Publishing details: National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery, 2015,
128 pages, illustrations (some colour)
Yardley Heidiview full entry
Reference: Meeting the Shadow, exhibition invite with brief essay and 3 illustrations
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2015, 4pp
Ref: 222
Fraser Leahview full entry
Reference: Messages from the world invisable, exhibition invite with brief essay and 4 illustrations
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2015, 6pp
Ref: 222
Anderson Fraserview full entry
Reference: Cooking - 43, exhibition invite with brief essay and 4 illustrations
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2015, 6pp
Ref: 222
Lloyd Normanview full entry
Reference: see Dominic Winter UK auction catalogue, 16 July, 29015, lot 303 - Lloyd (Norman, 1895-1983). Warships under camouflage, Le Havre, 1916, oil on canvas board, signed lower left, additionally inscribed in red to verso ‘Havre/16’, and with later handwritten full inscription, possibly in the artist’s hand, below, board manufacturer’s stamp of G. Roberson & Co to verso, 203 x 255mm (8 x 10ins), framed. Provenance: Private Collection, Gloucestershire. The Australian artist Norman Lloyd was born near Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia in 1895, and left school in 1911 to study painting with the artists Julian Ashton and James R. Jackson in Sydney. He enlisted with the Australian Imperial Forces in 1916, and was transported to Europe where he was seriously wounded at Polygon Wood on 20th September 1917. He returned to Sydney in February 1918, and from the 1920s onwards exhibited with various galleries in Sydney and Melbourne. In the 1930s Lloyd moved to London where he became a member of the Royal Institute of Oil Painters (in 1936) and the London Sketch Club, of which he was president between 1941 and 1942. The present work is therefore an unusual early example of his output and documents his arrival from Australia at Le Havre in 1916. (1)
* The description of the above lot by the auctioneer in the language of the auction is the governing description. Any translation using Google translate is a guide only - its accuracy cannot be guaranteed and it is used at your own risk.
Estimate: 300 GBP - 500 GBP
Menpes Mortimerview full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Auctions, The Art Emporium, Lot 25, July 25, 2015 - MORTIMER L. MENPES (1860-1938) Light and Shade, circa 1901, oil and black chalk on board, signed 'Mortimer Menpes' lower left, 32 x 40 cm

EXHIBITED: The World of Mortimer Menpes: pater, etcher, raconteur, Art Gallery of South Australia, 14 June - 7 September 2014

LITERATURE: Mortimer Menpes, World's Children, Adams and Charles Black, London, 1903, pl. no. 45

Gary Morgan, Etched Works of Mortimer Menpes 1855-1938 Vol. 1, Stuart Galleries, Crafers West, 2012, p.137

Julie Robinson, The World of Mortimer Menpes: painter, etcher, raconteur, Thames & Hudson, London, 2014

Mortimer Menpes’ refined painting Light and Shade almost prefigures an important aspect of early English Modernism. Menpes was an extremely gifted Adelaide-born artist who went on to study at the local School of Design and whose enviable skills were honed at the School of Art in London in 1878 after his family returned to England. His highly accomplished paintings were shown at London’s Royal Academy in Piccadilly and such was his artistic success that he exhibited there for the next twenty years. Subsequently, he befriended James McNeil Whistler and the two worked and travelled together, as well as sharing a flat in Chelsea. Menpes was South Australia’s first artist to have resounding international success.

There is little doubt that Whistler’s subtle influence may be discerned in the background of Menpes’ Light and Shade – even the painting’s title hints at an admiration of Whistler’s use of softly toned atmospheric effects. One can see that Menpes thought carefully about the visual effects of the entire composition of the painting, in that it reveals a reduced tonal range and a restricted use of colour. The background is arranged almost like an abstracted composition with flat plane pictorial features that show painterly effects, visual texture and scumbled surfaces. A usage that runs counter to Menpes’ more usual and earlier naturalistic manner. This more usual approach is seen on the right hand side of the painting. Its figure is much more realistically rendered, especially in its facial features and in the definition of the overlapping hands of the young girl in the foreground.

Looked at in these aesthetically operative ways the present painting is an optically balanced study in spatial and colouristic harmonies, more cautious than Whistler but deftly harmonious nonetheless. There is too, in this painting, visual evidence of the discerning use of a subtle Japanese refinement and understatement. The informal beauty of everyday things, of worn surfaces, the asymmetrical proportions and the modest subject matter, all of them no doubt absorbed during his travel to Japan in 1887, then newly opened to the West. One senses in this evocative and visually pleasing painting the lingering appeal of a lost Age.

Mortimer Menpes artistic vision did not look back to the past for inspiration like his classmate Sir Edward Poynter or like Lord Frederic Leighton, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, John Waterhouse and the Pre-Raphaelites. By contrast, Menpes saw himself and his forward-looking paintings as decidedly modern. The artist read widely, travelled relentlessly and remained open to new ideas about culture, especially the culture of exotic places and foreign lands.


Menpes was the late Empire artist par excellence with an important exhibition of his works entitled The World of Mortimer Menpes: Painter, Etcher, Raconteur was held at the Art Gallery of South Australia from 14 June to 7 September 2014. It revealed him as one of the greatest forgotten Australian talents.
Rudd Van Tview full entry
Reference: article on Van T Rudd in The Saturday Paper, July 4-10, 2015, p30 by Maxine Beneba Clarke. [Van T Rudd is nephew of former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd]
Ref: 222
Lock Samuel Robert (1822-1881)view full entry
Reference: see Mossgreen Auctions, July 25 2015,

Start Price AU$5000, Samuel Robert Lock (1822-1881), Corrobbaree South Australia, watercolour, signed and titled verso: S R Lock, Corrobbaree S. Australia, 24 x 33 cm
PROVENANCE: Private Collection, London
Private Collection, Melbourne, EXHIBITED:
DRAWN: Following the Line, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, 03 May - 31 Jul 2014
Brown Geoffreyview full entry
Reference: Art Gallery of South Australia exhibition (catalogue produced?) [’This display of newly-acquired prints by South Australian painter and printmaker Geoffrey Brown (1926-2014) focuses on his landscape subjects. Brown’s fascination with landscape endured over a career that spanned six decades. His etchings and lithographs in this display show his continual reinterpretation of the natural and built environments that surrounded him.

Brown was born in Adelaide in 1926 and studied at the South Australian School of Art. He travelled abroad to Europe in the early 1950s but it was not until he returned to Adelaide that he took up printmaking, exploring processes including multi-plate colour etching. These small colour etchings produced after his first European trip shows his technical skill the medium. Brown interprets scenes from the Adelaide Hills with a fluid etched line and effective use of multiple plates for coloured inks.

In the late 1950s Brown studied etching and lithography at the London Central School of Art, before returning home to teach at St Peter’s College and later at the South Australian School of Art as a printmaking lecturer. His larger scale prints from the 1960 reinterpret cityscapes as more abstracted forms, and colour lithographs from 1970s and 1980s relate strongly to his paintings from the period and evoke a suburban nostalgia. Brown taught printmaking until the late 1980s, and continued exhibiting new work until the mid 2000s.

In late 2014, the Art Gallery acquired fifty-five prints by Brown who sadly passed away soon after.’]
Publishing details: AGSA, 2015
Parke Trentview full entry
Reference: Trent Parke: The Black Rose. Authors: Trent Parke, Julie Robinson, Maria Zagala
[’Trent Parke as both a master photographer and storyteller in the exhibition book ‘]
Publishing details: Hardcover, 168 pages, fully illustrated
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Highlights: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collection: Art Gallery of South Australia. Nici Cumpston

Principally a picture book, this publication showcases works by artists from across Australia. It gives a broad introduction to the extraordinary diversity and breadth of the Art Gallery of South Australia’s collection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art.
Publishing details: AGSA, Hardcover, 320 x 245 mm, 80 pages, 102 illustrations
ISBN 978-1-921668-21-0
Black Dorritview full entry
Reference: see Tennant Auction, Summer Fine Art Sale (2 Days), Friday 17 July 2015 Item Lot Number: 705
Dorrit Black (1891-1951) Australian
"On the Rocks"
Signed in pencil, inscribed with title and numbered 1/50, bears artist's monogram, linocut, 21cm by 32cm, unframed


Provenance: Edith Lawrence, thence by descent 

Dorothea Foster (Dorrit) Black was born in 1891, Adelaide Australia. In 1909 she went to the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts. Following this, in 1915, she attended Julian Ashton Sydney Art School. 

From 1911-12 she visited Europe with her parents. A very modern woman, breaking out of Victorian traditions, she decided to travel to Europe again in 1927 for two years. She spent three months with Claude Flight and Edith Lawrence at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London where she was captivated by their use of colour and elevation of the linocut as an original art form. She then studied at André Lhote's academy in Paris, and at his summer school, adopting the practices of Cubism. She returned to Sydney in 1929, and held the first of her six solo exhibitions with the Group of Seven Australian artists.

From 1931-33 she opened the Modern Art Centre in Sydney becoming the first woman to run an art gallery in Australia. After travelling oversees from 1934-5, she settled in Adelaide, where she taught part time at the School of Arts and Crafts, continued to paint, and contributed heavily to the Australian art scene.
In 1940 the National Gallery of South Australia bought one of her paintings. 
She continued to exhibit in both Sydney and Melbourne until her untimely death in a car crash in 1959.

Though an important member of the Australian modern art movement, Black's work was not greatly appreciated at the time and she received many scathing reviews from periodicals such as the Sydney Morning Herald. 

Many of her works remain in private collections, and as such few museums outside of Australia have been able to represent her as an artist.

Estimate: £3000-5000

Fagg Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Tulloch’s Auction, 15 July, 2015, Lot 854- George Fagg - Pen & Ink - Holy Trinity Hall - Church Street Hobart - Dated 1894 - 23cm x 33cm -NB: Fagg was a noted Hobart Architect between 1885-1897 est $300-400
Abbott Johnview full entry
Reference: from DAAO: John Abbott b. 1803 NSW
Artist (Painter)
This sketcher, watercolourist and songwriter became the registrar-general of births, deaths and marriages in Van Diemen's Land in the mid nineteenth century. His watercolours were exhibited in the 1866 Melbourne and 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibitions. - Sketcher, songwriter, surveyor, soldier and public servant, was born in New South Wales, son of Major Edward Abbott and his wife Louisa, daughter of Admiral Smith. Between 1789 and 1810 his father served with the NSW Corps and in 1815 was appointed the first Deputy Judge-Advocate of Van Diemen’s Land. By 1824 John was clerk to the Hobart Town bench of magistrates. Four years later, after applying for a position with the VDL Survey Department, John Abbott moved to Sydney and joined the NSW Surveyor-General’s Department under Thomas Mitchell . By 1832 he was assistant surveyor in charge of the approaches to the new Lennox Bridge at Lapstone in the lower Blue Mountains.
Abbott later returned to Van Diemen’s Land where he was registrar-general of births, deaths and marriages in 1840-57. In 1842 he acquired 640 acres at Gordon on the D’Entrecasteaux Channel and built a house that he named Rookwood. Abbott never married. He devoted considerable time to gardening and to his various cultural interests, including painting watercolour sketches and writing the words for the 'Song of the Fair Emigrant’, published as sheet music by the Hobart Town lithographer R.V. Hood in 1854.
Towards the end of his life Abbott sent three entries to the 1866 Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition: a watercolour view of the locale of the coal on his property; a Book of Tasmanian Scraps, from an Australian Native ; and Busts of Tasmanian Natives . He certainly executed the first two, but was probably only the exhibitor of the third (possibly busts of Truganini and Woureddy by the Tasmanian sculptor Benjamin Law ). His Book of Tasmanian Scraps was awarded a medal and was subsequently shown at the 1870 Sydney Intercolonial Exhibition where he also showed a watercolour of D’Entrecasteaux Channel (possibly the same 1866 view) and another of his drawings, Dogs , was exhibited by C. Barrer.
Abbott died in Hobart Town on 10 July 1875, aged 71. His only painting held in a public collection is a monochrome watercolour dated 1828, The Boat Harbour of Woollooderra [now Ulladulla, New South Wales], as seen from the S.W. , which was transferred from the Lands Department to the Mitchell Library in 1921. Other sketches survive with descendants.
Writers:
McDonald, Patricia R.
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
2011
Moore-Jones Horace view full entry
Reference: From AASD website 16 July 2015: One of the most famous Gallipoli paintings will go up for auction next month, the second version of the iconic Simpson and his Donkey painting to go on the market this year.

However, this version of Horace Moore-Jones' watercolour of a New Zealand medic leading a donkey as he ferried a badly wounded Anzac soldier to a medical post on Gallipoli in 1915 is expected to sell for as much as $500,000, compared to the $257,000 which a smaller version fetched at auction earlier this year.

International Art Centre director Richard Thomson said the latest version to come on the market was probably the first or second of the five or six versions Moore-Jones did of the painting.

It is signed and dated 1915.

"It is an extremely important and highly significant painting," said Thomson.

"Of all the conflicts New Zealand has been involved in over the last 100 years of so, there is nothing like this.

"There is nothing that shows such pain and suffering. It is a gutsy and dramatic portrayal of what war can do. But the pain and suffering this painting depicts is only part of its very powerful and evocative symbolism of war."

The painting is owned by the Commerce Club of Auckland (formerly the Commercial Travellers Club).

The club bought it from Moore-Jones' widow in 1926 for 300 pounds and it hung in the Remuera clubrooms for many years before being loaned to the Auckland War Memorial and Museum.

There it has been an integral part of the Scars on the Heart exhibition, which covers New Zealand's involvement in wars.

Ad Feedback

Anton Coetzee, the Commerce Club general manager, said the club needed funds for repairs and maintenance to its building and it had been decided, with great reluctance, to sell the painting.

He said the painting was likely to be protected under the Protected Objects Act, 1975, which meant it could not be taken out of New Zealand without ministerial approval and that was given only in exceptional circumstances.

"This has got real guts and we think it is a national treasure. It is a hugely important part of our heritage and in our view it should not be lost to the country."

The auction will be held on July 22, at the International Art Centre in Auckland.


Pailthorpe Badenview full entry
Reference: Spatial Operations, exhibition invite
Publishing details: Martin Browne Contemporary, 2015, 4pp, price list inserted.
Ref: 222
Ettelson Jamesview full entry
Reference: James Ettelson - Fixated, exhibition invite with 3 illustrations and brief essay.
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2015, 4pp
Ref: 222
Hananiah Carlaview full entry
Reference: Mapping the Insurmountable exhibition invite with 3 illustrations and brief essay.
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, 2015, 4pp
Ref: 222
Auchinachie Collectionview full entry
Reference: Auchinachie Collection, 47 Surry Street, Darlinghurst, sold by David Barsby auctions 12 July 2015, 347 lots including Horace Trenerry oil.
Publishing details: David Barsby auctions 12 July 2015
Ref: 133
Ashworth Edwardview full entry
Reference: From Hordern House catalogue July 2015: Edward Ashworth. Watercolour, captioned: “Fortaleza de São Francisco Macao”.
Watercolour, 220 x 260 mm; ink caption lower right; some darkening of paper around edges where previously framed, now in acid-free mount to original framing dimensions. Macau,, prob- ably mid-1844.
Original watercolour of the Fortaleza de São Francisco, Macau An important original watercolour of Macau.
Edward Ashworth was born near Exeter, Devon in 1814, and trained as an articled apprentice to Robert Cornish, architect to Exeter Cathedral. Unhappy with the quality of his commissions in England, Ashworth decided to immigrate to New Zealand via Port Phillip in May 1842. During a two-year stay, Ashworth made numerous watercolours of Auckland and its street
life including an expedition into the Waikato, now treasured views of the very first stages of colonial occupation.
Ashworth left Auckland in February 1844, heading across to Hong Kong aboard the American ship Navigator by way of Batavia (Jakarta) and Macau. The timing was impeccable. The first ‘official’ land auction of Hong Kong under Crown sovereignty had taken place just a few months earlier, in January 1844, and a building boom ensued. Now, finally, he could find actual architectural commissions and build.
Ashworth returned to England in 1846 and set up practice in Exeter. Here, in bucolic Devon, he remained until his death in 1896, devoting much of his work to the restoration of parish churches.
$12,500
Gilks Edward lithographerview full entry
Reference: From Hordern House catalogue July 2015: Edward Gilks . Prize for Lithography at the Melbourne Exhibition, 1854.
Bronze medal, 64 mm., edge impressed ‘Prize Medal 239 E Gilks Lithography’, good extremely fine; with tan morocco case of issue, the case a little rubbed. London, Joseph S. Wyon, 1854.
Britannia & the Southern Cross

A beautiful rarity: the 1854 prize medal for lithography at the first Melbourne Exhibition, awarded to the important colonial lithographer Edward Gilks, in its original case of issue. Roger Butler suggests that Gilks only first became active in Australia around 1853, and as this medal was awarded in the following year, it obviously dates from the very beginning of his career.
Gilks (c. 1822-1886), was one of the more important Australian lithographers, perhaps best known for his separately issued images such as the ‘Commissioner’s Camp, Castlemaine, in 1852 (Mount Alexander)’ (see Roger Butler, Printed 1801-
1901, p. 154), or his portraits of Burke and Wills.
Gilks also contributed to famous colonial illustrated works such as the Melbourne Album published by Charles Troedel in 1863-4, as well as being one of the team assembled for the wonderful, and undervalued, Prodromus of Frederick McCoy. The principles of lithography were first discovered in the last years of the eighteenth century, but the practice was not introduced to Australia until the efforts of Governor Sir Thomas Brisbane, who acquired a press as part of his equipping of the Parramatta observatory in 1822. The format was widely adopted, and lithography became the mainstay of the burgeoning interest in Australian views and portraits.
Little surprise, then, that a prize medal for
lithography was awarded at the 1854 Exhibition,
which was held in conjunction with the French
Exposition Universelle of 1855. An impressive series
of artists were awarded prizes in Melbourne, but this
may have been the only prize for lithography, and
may in fact be the only such medal for any type of
printed works (a quick census of fellow nominees
suggests most of the other prizes were for painters and sculptors, although there was also, for example, a photography prize, given to Robert McClelland).
This is an attractive medal in its own right, with the Melbourne Exhibition Building to the obverse, and Brittania being given the fruits of the harvest to the reverse (with the Southern Cross visible in the background).
$3200
Summers Charlesview full entry
Reference: From Hordern House catalogue July 2015: Charles Summers - Intercolonial Exhibition Medal.
Large copper medal, 220 mm. diameter, impressed “C. Summers Sculp.” And “W. Calvert fecit”; medal in fine original condition, housed in original printed mount laid down on timber, 444 x 360 mm., the mount worn, with some restoration. Melbourne, 1866-1867.
By the sculptor of the Burke & Wills memorial
A fine example of the elegant neo-classical work of Charles Summers, Australia’s leading sculptor of the nineteenth century. Summers won many official commissions, including the supervision of the stone carvings for the Victorian Parliament House, the execution of the Burke and Wills memorial, the biggest bronze casting ever undertaken in Australia, and the design of this medal for the Intercolonial Exhibition.
The maker of the medal was William Calvert, a Melbourne-based engraver, lithographer and draughtsman. Coincidentally his brother, Samuel Calvert, was a silver medallist himself at the Intercolonial Exhibition. This particular copper example of the medal was awarded to John Jones of Sheepshead, Victoria, probably a local blacksmith, for ‘driving three picks’ (Official Catalogue of the Intercolonial Exhibition 1866-7, no. 37, p. 48).
$3750
Rimmer Bradview full entry
Reference: Silence: The Western Australian Wheatbelt by Brad Rimmer. This copy is Number 39 of a limited edition of 50 boxed sets. Presented in as issued custom made box with 2 original signed colour (Type C printed on Fuji Crystal Archive Flex measuring 28 x 35.6 cm) photographs. Includes a certificate of authenticity which is to the verso of a colour print. Contemporary Australian photography.
Publishing details: published in Sydney by T&G Publishing, 2010. Quarto, pictorial boards. 96pp.
Ref: 1000
McWilliams Michael view full entry
Reference: Glover Prize, People’s Choice Award: Michael McWilliams
The Bush Rovers
People's Choice
2015

+

Michael McWilliams
White Invaders
People's Choice, Hanger's Choice Award
2014

+

Michael McWilliams
Bush Blankets
People's Choice
2012

+

Michael McWilliams
Bandicoot on a Log
The Glover Prize Winner
2004

[’The Glover Prize has become one of Australia's most significant awards for landscape painting. It is awarded annually for the work judged the best contemporary landscape painting of Tasmania. The winner receives $40,000 and a bronze maquette of colonial artist John Glover, whose legacy is celebrated though the Prize.
Landscape painting is defined in its broadest sense. The aim is to stimulate conversations about the meaning and possibilities expressed in the words landscape, painting and Tasmania. The Glover is open to artists from anywhere in the world. The exhibition is held over the March long-weekend in the historic Falls Park pavilion in Evandale, a village on the beautiful northern plains of Tasmania.
The winner of the Glover is selected from around 40 works chosen by a panel of eminent judges.’]
Publishing details: https://www.johnglover.com.au/ for illustrations
Glover Prize and Glover Society (Tasmania)view full entry
Reference: [’The Glover Prize has become one of Australia's most significant awards for landscape painting. It is awarded annually for the work judged the best contemporary landscape painting of Tasmania. The winner receives $40,000 and a bronze maquette of colonial artist John Glover, whose legacy is celebrated though the Prize.
Landscape painting is defined in its broadest sense. The aim is to stimulate conversations about the meaning and possibilities expressed in the words landscape, painting and Tasmania. The Glover is open to artists from anywhere in the world. The exhibition is held over the March long-weekend in the historic Falls Park pavilion in Evandale, a village on the beautiful northern plains of Tasmania.
The winner of the Glover is selected from around 40 works chosen by a panel of eminent judges... The John Glover Society Inc, based in Evandale, Tasmania, was established to highlight the innovative work of the legendary colonial painter and local resident, John Glover [1767-1849].
The Society promotes cultural projects to keep the memory of John Glover alive. In 2003 the Society commisioned a life-size statue of John Glover by sculptor, Peter Corlett. It was unveiled in Evandale by the Governor of Tasmania the Honourable Sir Guy Green on 18 Feburary 2003, the date both Glover’s birthday and the date he arrived in Tasmania in 1831.
2004 the acquisitive Glover Prize for a landscape painting of Tasmania and the Glover Concert was launched.
2011 the Society published the book “Looking at Landscape” by Dr Jane Deeth as part of its mandate to educate the community about the art of landscape. 
A major project for 2012 has been upgrading the Glover website. We are grateful to the WD Booth Charitable Trust for their generous support cataloguing our exhibitions for the website.
The Society is working towards establishing a gallery to house the Glover Prize collection, engaging visitors with the Prize, landscape painting and the Tasmanian landscape. ’]
Publishing details: https://www.johnglover.com.au/ for illustrations
Duff Leoniview full entry
Reference: Glover Prize, People’s Choice Award: Leoni Duff
Down on Cameron St.
People's Choice
2013

+

Leoni Duff
Under the Sidling
People's Choice
2004

[’The Glover Prize has become one of Australia's most significant awards for landscape painting. It is awarded annually for the work judged the best contemporary landscape painting of Tasmania. The winner receives $40,000 and a bronze maquette of colonial artist John Glover, whose legacy is celebrated though the Prize.
Landscape painting is defined in its broadest sense. The aim is to stimulate conversations about the meaning and possibilities expressed in the words landscape, painting and Tasmania. The Glover is open to artists from anywhere in the world. The exhibition is held over the March long-weekend in the historic Falls Park pavilion in Evandale, a village on the beautiful northern plains of Tasmania.
The winner of the Glover is selected from around 40 works chosen by a panel of eminent judges.’]
Publishing details: https://www.johnglover.com.au/ for illustrations
Falk Lisaview full entry
Reference: Glover Prize, People’s Choice Award: Lisa Falk
Speakers for the Dead
People's Choice
2011


Lisa Falk
The Transit of Venus
People's Choice
2008

+

Lisa Falk
Gnothi Seauton! 'Apollo's Golden Lyre', & 'The Citrinous Quintessence' (Bluestone Rock Oracle 1)
People's Choice
2006

[’The Glover Prize has become one of Australia's most significant awards for landscape painting. It is awarded annually for the work judged the best contemporary landscape painting of Tasmania. The winner receives $40,000 and a bronze maquette of colonial artist John Glover, whose legacy is celebrated though the Prize.
Landscape painting is defined in its broadest sense. The aim is to stimulate conversations about the meaning and possibilities expressed in the words landscape, painting and Tasmania. The Glover is open to artists from anywhere in the world. The exhibition is held over the March long-weekend in the historic Falls Park pavilion in Evandale, a village on the beautiful northern plains of Tasmania.
The winner of the Glover is selected from around 40 works chosen by a panel of eminent judges.’]
Publishing details: https://www.johnglover.com.au/ for illustrations


First | Previous | Record 60,801 – 61,800 of 1,000