Showing posts with label Artwork of the Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artwork of the Day. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Gleeson - Aubade for a Summer Solstice

James Gleeson (1915-2008)
Aubade for a Summer Solstice 1989
oil on linen
178 x 152cm
Signed ‘Gleeson 89’ lower left
Provenance: The collection of the artist
no.2354

James Gleeson is Australia’s most important surrealist painter and one of Australia’s most esteemed cultural critics. He is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other public collections both in Australia and overseas. In 2004 the National Gallery of Victoria curated a major travelling exhibition of Gleeson’s work entitled James Gleeson: Beyond the Screen of Sight.

He has been the recipient of numerous coveted awards including the 1987 McCaughey Prize.

Aubade for a Summer Solstice 1989 is a monumental painting in which Gleeson’s skill as a painter and his fathomless imagination have combined to create a picture of surreal beauty and mystique.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Nolan - River Shooting (Kelly)

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
River Shooting (Kelly) 1964
Oil on board
120 x 150 cm
verso: 17 Nov 1964 Nolan
28 (circled) River Shooting / E5357 x S. Nolan
Marlborough Galleries Label, Stock No. NON4742 /
Centre Between Column (on stretcher)
no.8362

Provenance:
Marlborough-Gerson Gallery New York,
Corporate collection London

Exhibited:
Marlborough-Gerson Gallery New York 1964,
Grosvenor Fair London 2005

River Shooting (Kelly) 1964 is part of a small series of important paintings which precede and directly inform the monumental River Bend I (Australian National University) and River Bend II 1964-65. The role of Ned Kelly in Nolan’s art has been a constantly changing one throughout his career. His fascination with the Kelly myth was not a form of historical documentation, rather as Jane Clark explains, it adapted “ to suit the artist’s own experiences and moods… He has been a hero, a fool, a man who armoured himself against Australia, who faced it, didn’t face it, conquered it, lost it - ‘ambiguity personifed’.”1

The central focus of River Shooting 1964 is the wounded policeman, Constable Scanlon, who was murdered by Kelly at Stringybark Creek in the Wombat Ranges of North-eastern Victoria in October 1978 leading to the Gang’s apprehension two years later at Glenrowan, and to Kelly’s execution.

Nolan returned to the Ned Kelly subject late in 1964 after returning from travels through Africa and Antarctica. The dominant image of Nolan’s Kelly as mythic hero, which established the 1940s Kelly series as a quintessentially Australian symbol, is transformed in River Shooting into a universal figure; his humanity rather than his heroicism the emphasis here. The emphasis on the mythic hero figure, commanding in the landscape, has been reversed with the image of Kelly a vital but almost ghost-like presence among the colours and textures of the Australian bush.

From the early 1960s onwards Nolan worked consistently in oils for the first time. His earlier work up to around 1950 had relied heavily on the use of Ripolin enamel. River Shooting 1964 exemplifies Nolan’s prolonged search to achieve in his words a “stereoscopic effect” of the lush Australian bush. Nolan explained that he “found some solutions in Paul Cézanne’s Dans le parc du chateau (London National Gallery). I noticed that Cézanne had very broken shapes that he cut through with the trunks of trees. The stereoscopic effect comes partially from the sudden placement of the straight edge against the mottled and divided background.”2

1Clark. J., Sidney Nolan: Landscapes and Legends, ICCA, Sydney, 1987, p.163.
2 Sidney Nolan quoted in Lynn. E., Sidney Nolan: Australia, Sydney, 1979, p.130.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Sutherland - Asters in a White Vase

Jean Sutherland (1902 - 1978)
Asters in a White Vase c.1927
Oil on canvas
56 x 41cm
no.3146

Jean Sutherland is represented in the National Gallery of Victoria as well as many important collections throughout Australia. Sutherland was the recipient of many awards including the 1923 National Gallery of Victoria Travelling Art Scholarship.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Blackman - Cat's Tale

Charles Blackman (b. 1928)
Cat's Tale
Etching
40 x 30 cm (paper size)
15 x 15 cm (image size)
no.9926

Charles Blackman is a major figure in Australian art of the post-war years. His haunting and enchanting images of women and girls, absorbed in daydreams or games have an enduring appeal. Two significant themes in his work have been the Schoolgirl and Alice in Wonderland. Deep shadows and the accentuation of his figure's eyes occur throughout Blackman's works with a pervasive sense of melancholy.

Charles Blackman was largely self-taught, but he attended night classes in drawing and design at the East Sydney Technical College from 1942-45 under Hayward Veal. Blackman was a co-founder of the Melbourne Contemporary Art Society in 1953 and was one of seven Antipodeans responsible for the Antipodean Manifesto - a reaction against what they saw as the meteoric rise of abstract expressionism and non-figurative art in Australia and its intolerance of figurative painting. He has exhibited frequently since and is known for his facility in drawing.

In 1951 Blackman married a poet, Barbara Patterson, who was to become a lasting presence in his work. Blackman has won many awards throughout his career, including the Rowney prize for drawing in 1959, the Helena Rubenstein Scholarship in 1960, the Dyeson Endowment Award and the Crouch Prize. Blackman's work was included in the Whitechapel Open Exhibition in 1961 and Tate Gallery exhibitions of Australian Art 1962-63. A major retrospective, 'Schoolgirls and Angels,' was organised in 1993 by the National Gallery of Victoria, touring to Sydney, Brisbane and Perth. In 1997 Blackman was awarded an OBE for his services to art. His work is held in all Australian state and most regional galleries, institutional and private collections.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Olsen - Paella

John Olsen (b.1928)
Paella
etching A/P
6.7 x 9.7cm (image size)
40.5 x 30.2cm (paper size)

John Olsen is one of Australia's most significant and accomplished artists and is recognised for this both nationally and internationally for his energetic and distinctive art.

Olsen's name is widely associated with his exuberant and colloquial You Beaut Country series which firmly established his reputation in the early 1960s. He is also famous for his interpretation of Sydney harbour in his commission for the Sydney Opera House called The Salute to Five Bells undertaken in the 1970s.

Plants, birds and animals began to feature in his works during the 1970s and 80s when he travelled extensively across the country, giving new insights into Australia's regional and desert landscapes though he has always sought to capture a spiritual and universal dimension to the landscape and the natural world in his work.

Olsen has won many awards including the Archibald Prize in 2004 for his self-portrait, the Wynne Prize in 1969, and an OBE in 1977. His works are represented in the National Gallery of Australia and most state and regional galleries. His works are also held in private and corporate collections both nationally and internationally.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Irving - Beyond the Fence

Tony Irving (b.1939)
Beyond the fence 2009
oil on linen
80 x 130cm

Tony Irving is one of Australia’s leading contemporary realist painters whose devotion to realist painting extends across four decades. Irving is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Lady Potter Collection as well as numerous other public collections throughout Australia. He has held exhibitions in the UK, Indonesia and Singapore and in 1966 was awarded the coveted McCaughey Prize.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Crooke - Villagers Relaxing

Ray Crooke (b. 1922)
Villagers Relaxing
oil on canvas
75 x 61cm
signed lower left 'R. Crooke'
no.11049

Ray Crooke exhibited at the Tate Gallery London in 1963 and was awarded the Archibald Portrait Prize in 1969. His painting trips to Thursday Island, New Guinea, Cape York and Fiji continue to be inspiration for his work. Crooke explores contour and silhouette using rich blocks of colour, and the nuances of positive and negative space in the manner of Gauguin. The artist reveals in his travel diaries and sketchbooks the basis for his paintings - the strong light effects at different times of the day, the colour of the lush foliage after rain, and contrasting golden skin tones.

His paintings are in major collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, state galleries and the Vatican Collection Rome.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Artwork of the Day - David Boyd - Three Children by the Sea

David Boyd (b.1924)
Three Children by the Sea c.1980
Oil on board
43 x 65 cm
Signed 'David Boyd' lower right
Provenance: Private collection NSW
no.11077

David Boyd is a figurative painter, ceramic sculptor and potter. David Boyd's art stems from a long family tradition of artistic talent. Acclaimed as a potter in the fifties and sixties, he began his career as a painter in 1957 with a series of symbolic paintings on Australian explorers. Since then, David Boyd has painted several major series of works, including his powerful Trial series, the Tasmanian Aborigines, the Wanderer and Exiles series. Picturing innocence and evil, destruction and creation, his works convey mythical and universal themes. Having won significant international recognition, David Boyd was invited by the Commonwealth Institute of Art, London, to hold a retrospective of paintings at their Art Gallery in 1969. David Boyd is represented in the Australian National Gallery, Canberra; all State and many regional galleries; the Mertz collection, USA; the Power collection, Sydney; and many major international galleries and private collections in Australia and overseas.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Gleeson - Surreal Landscape with Figures

James Gleeson (1915-2008)
Surreal Landscape with Figures c.1943
oil on canvas board
39.6 x 48.6cm
no.2110

James Gleeson was Australia's best known and most important Surrealist. He had been painting and exhibiting consistently from the 1930s until 2008. He played a significant role in the Australian art scene, not only as a painter and poet, but as a critic, writer and curator. Gleeson combined skillful draughtsmanship with a great facility in handling paint. Delving into the subconscious, Gleeson used literary, mythological or religious subject matter to allow the viewer glimpses of extraordinary beauty. Regardless of their scale, the resulting paintings convey a sumptuous monumentality.

Gleeson is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, most regional galleries, university collections, Artbank, and many corporate and private collections.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Nolan - Wimmera

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Wimmera 1942
Ripolin enamel on canvas
42 x 52 cm (sight size)
initialled and dated lower right: 11.42 N
no.8085

Provenance:
The Estate of Sir Sidney Nolan

From May 1942 until February 1944 Sidney Nolan was stationed as an army guard in the remote Wimmera district of North Western Victoria. Despite the limitations that the situation imposed on the young artist, it nonetheless gave rise to one of Nolan’s most important early series, focusing predominantly on the expansive wheat-fields dominating the region.

Painted in November 1942, when Nolan was stationed in the town of Dimboola, Wimmera arises from an especially noteworthy phase in the series. For the artist Albert Tucker in Nolan’s Dimboola paintings, “we glimpse for the first time since Roberts, McCubbin and the early Streeton, the return of an authentic national vision on a higher and more independent level.”1

The painting bears the characteristic hallmarks of Nolan’s Wimmera landscapes, in particular the vivid primary colours and flattened picture plain. In common with a number of other Wimmera works, the rapidly executed bushes in the foreground are dramatically offset by the bright blue sky and sun-drenched landscape.

In 1983 Nolan donated a large number of his Wimmera works to the National Gallery of Victoria where they are now on permanent display in the Gallery of Australian art.
DS

1 Albert Tucker, ‘Two Melbourne exhibitions of paintings’, Angry Penguins 5, September, 1943.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Hawkins - Conflict

Weaver Hawkins (1893-1977)
Conflict
Oil on board
59 x 78 cm
no.1900

Weaver Hawkins’ pursuit of a singular and personal vision was greatly influenced by his experiences as a soldier during WWI. It was in this war that Hawkins lost the use of his right arm, only having partial use of his left. Travelling extensively throughout Europe, and to Nth Africa, Tahiti and New Zealand, Hawkins’ eventually settled in Australia in 1935. He developed a significant public profile in the Sydney art world from the 1940s, and during his lifetime held eight solo shows and participated in 250 group exhibitions.

Hawkins’ works are built upon dramatic colour contrasts, volumetric forms, and taut compositions that give a great monumentally to his subjects. His observation of light and movement was greatly influenced by Cézannes’ technique of mapping the geometry of natural forms through colour, and the modernist concern for the way forms are related to one another in their architectural context. Hawkins’ interest in physicality produced works that balanced figurative and abstract elements in order to express ideas of order and freedom. The work of Weaver Hawkins is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, Australian State galleries, The City Museum and Art Galley in Bristol, The National Gallery in Valletta, and in the collection of The First National Bank of Chicago.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Nothling - Nowhereland like Hollywood

Stephen Nothling (b.1962)
Nowhereland like Hollywood
Graphite on paper
107 x 150cm
no.11043

Immersed within the idea of paradise and perfection, Nothling created the fictional, ‘Nowhereland,’ an imaginary destination which acts as a backdrop for his pictorial theatrics. In Nowhereland Nothling’s parachuted navigator, (perhaps the pilot from the biplane in Joyflight) descends gently to the middle of nowhere.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Thomson - Transmition

Ann Thomson (b.1933)
Transmition
Oil on linen
122 x 153cm
no.10705

Ann Thomson studied under Jon Molvig, Brisbane in 1956 and at the National Art School, Sydney from 1957 – 1962. In 1978 she studied etching with Paul Frank and Henri Goetz whilst Artist in Residence at the Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris, France. In 1985 she was Artist in Residence at “Parataio” Studio, Tuscany, Italy and in 1995 at the Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris, France. Ann Thomson lives and works in Sydney.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Proud - The Suitors

Geoffrey Proud (b. 1946)
The Suitors 2007
oil on canvas
44x 43cm
no.9855

Often quirky and verging on the surreal, Geoffrey Proud's paintings in oil and pastel are like fractured fairytales. Depicting a world of innocence with a sometimes ominous edge, Proud's paintings are fantastic and bizarre. His choice of subjects is broad, including children and childhood narratives, flowers, still lifes and nudes. Alternating between expressionist impastoed brushwork and sensitive detail, he experiments freely with vibrant colour and varying textures. The highly glazed surfaces of his recent oils give his scenes an ethereal and otherworldly quality. Proud has won numerous awards including the Sulman Prize in 1976 for a painting on perspex, and the Archibald prize in 1990 for his portrait of writer Dorothy Hewett. He has exhibited consistently in all state capitals since 1966 and is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; many State and regional gallery collections; Parliament House collections in Canberra and Sydney; Artbank; IBM collection; and the Elton John collection, London

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Platten - Head and House

Anna Platten (b.1957)
Head and House 2007
charcoal on paper
125 x 100cm
no.10769


Finalist in the Kedumba drawing prize 2007

One of the most important artists of current times Anna Platten was included in the recent Contemporary Australia; Optimism at the Queensland Art Gallery with two large commissioned works. She was also included in the Samstag Museum's Colliding Worlds earlier this year. John Mcdonald included Anna in his recent book Studio a selection the leading contemporary painters and Australian Art Collector magazine has listed her as one of the top 50 most collectable artists. Anna Platten is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, Art Gallery of South Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Tweed Heads Regional Gallery, Newcastle Regional Gallery, Art Bank, Parliament House; South Australia, University of South Australia, important private collections nationally and internationally.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Kruger - Slice of Garden

Elisabeth Kruger (b.1955)
Slice of garden
oil on linen
122 x 306cm (diptych)
no.10887

Awarded the prestigious Moet & Chandon Art Fellowship (1989) and an overseas studio residency with the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council (1990), Elisabeth Kruger is recognised as one of Australia's leading contemporary artists. In her newest series of paintings, Kruger explores the luscious beauty of flowers. These are stunning floral masterpieces with a contemporary edge. Her work is represented in the Australian National Gallery, The National Gallery of Victoria, the Parliament House Collection, Macquarie University and major private collections.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Whiteley - Magpie

Brett Whiteley (1939-1992)
Magpie 1977
Sugarlift aquatint 20/60
50.5 x 50cm (plate size)
75 x 52.5cm (sheet size)
Signed 'Brett Whiteley' lower right
Edition number lower left
Edition of 60; 8-10 APs
Printed by Max Miller, Sydney
Publisher: Port Jackson Press, Sydney
no.7812

Birds are among the most important of all Whiteley's subjects.

Barry Pearce Pearce has described Whiteley as “Australia’s most sublime painter of birds, “as essential symbols of the song of creation and the joy of life.” Reference: Barry Pearce (1989), Australian Artists, Australian Birds, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, p.144.

Brett Whiteley is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries, as well as many important public collections both in Australia and overseas.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Artwork of the Day - Shead - The Rocking Horse

Garry Shead (b.1942)
The Rocking Horse 1986
Oil on canvas
90 x 120 cm
Provenance: Private collection Sydney
no.11133

Spanning more than five years, the 'Outback' series is an important period of work by Garry Shead that encapsulates his father’s narrative history of the adventurous jackaroo. Themes running throughout the body of work include loss of freedom and frustration symbolised by the breaking of the horse. Visually inspired by the outback landscapes by Sidney Nolan, the paintings are composed of warm ochres and burnt sienna reds. Initially the horses depicted in the early works from the series contained parts of the female body. The horses evolved to embody a sexual energy typically reserved for Shead’s female subjects and the relationship between man and horse served “as a metaphor for the relationship between man and woman, while the vastness of the outback landscape is constant setting for this drama.”1

1 Grishin S, Garry Shead and The Erotic Muse, Craftsman House, 2001 p.87
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