Showing posts with label Jean Sutherland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jean Sutherland. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Artwork of the Day - Sutherland - Asters in a White Vase
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.
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Artwork of the Day,
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Thursday, January 28, 2010
Staff Picks - Gallery Associate Laura Ryan
The space in these works is a virtual or abstract space while the rendering of objects wholly representational. I had a great interest in astronomy as a child. The heavens are an abstract emptiness with objects moving on principles of geometry. The world of atoms & molecules are often pictured as coloured spheres in this same black space. Atoms and molecules don’t actually look like this at all but this helps us to understand them conceptually. It is the same space of 3D computer modelling. I have grown up in a time when these images are commonplace and this is definitely an influence on the way I conceive of paintings. -Christopher Beaumont, 2007
The pixel paintings incorporate images of Chinese portraits, animals and landscape, each of which is central to the genre of traditional Chinese ink brush painting. Zhong has painted Chinese beauties, Peking opera characters, Door gods and Imperial dogs in his recent body of paintings. By using traditional Chinese inspired images Zhong conveys a sense of his cultural identity. The choice of images are pop, as the folk art of China are an important part of the everyday and popular culture. Woodblock prints and paper cut outs are placed on windows and doors in China. Door god images are placed on doors to protect from the evil spirits. The ‘Romeo and Juliet’ paintings show images of traditional inspired Chinese lovers relating to Shakespeare’s romantic tragedy. David Thomas writes, “Paradoxes abound, not the least of them being the telling of a highly romantic tale through the calculated images of a computer. But these paintings are undeniably contemporary images, sophisticated in their marriage of ancient Eastern customs with new Western technology. The elegant faces may be based on age-old concepts of Chinese beauty, but they materialise as pixelated images of the computer age.” (1)
(1) David Thomas, “Zhong Chen : The Unity of the past and the present”, Zhong Chen Catalogue, Melbourne, 2002.
By portraying these everyday visions using a traditional art training, the artist constructs a dialogue between commonplace existence and artistry, where subtle ironies along with a reverence for the art of the past are explored. The iconic figures of mother and child or a figure exuding pre-Raphaelite beauty may appear on a station platform, for instance. Special care in the portrayal of atmosphere and time of day acknowledges the legacy of the impressionts, while the introspective possibilities offered by the tradition of portraiture are explored. -Sam Wade 2009
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.
As Sasha Grishin describes the series: “Throughout the series the constant recurring motif is that of the fully clad male dancer, usually shown in an evening suit and occasionally appearing slightly awkward and uncertain of himself, accompanied by a nude, or an almost nude female dancer. On one very basic level there is the aspect of voyeuristic erotic wish-fullfillment, drawing on the surrealist strategy of undressing the woman with the male gaze that had been so effectively employed by Renne Magrite. Shead’s female dancers are of great sensuous beauty and lyrical charm. There is a hint of a more metaphysical dimension of this dance, relating it to the dance of life as interpreted by artists like Edvard Munch. The Dance is performed on an allegorical stage like the arena of life, sometimes with an awareness of an audience and sometimes under the harsh glow of the spotlights. In most of the ‘Dance Sequence’ paintings there is an indication of an open door in the background, at times shown as the source of light, but in all instances the door way is a path for esacpe. Shead achieves in this series of paintings a great lryicism in the paint surface, a warm sensuousness through which the female flesh glows in a rich radiance. Increasingly these intimate interior settings allude to ambiguous and seductive dream-like reality where ideas and interpretations float free from gravity and verbal associations."
Reference: Grishin S, Garry Shead and The Erotic Muse, Craftsman House, 2001 p.166.
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.
Asters in a White Vase c.1927 is a luminous, delicately painted still life.

Untitled (Bird) 1959
Ripolin enamel on paper
30.3 x 25.3 cm
Verso: Nolan / 10th April 1959 / New York
no.96003
Provenance: The artist
Private collection Sydney
Private collection Sydney
Nolan is arguably Australia’s most significant and internationally acclaimed artist. Kenneth Clark refers to him as one of the major artists of the 20th century. He is well known for dramatic shifts between dark, moody themes and bright, uplifting creations. Always fresh and spontaneous, he never relied upon one style or technique but rather experimented throughout his lifetime with many different methods of application, and also devised some of his own.
He commenced formal training twice through the National Gallery of Victoria School of Art but felt compelled to educate himself instead. One of his greatest influences was the French Romantic poet Arthur Rimbaud whose image has been interpreted frequently in many of Nolan’s paintings. A love of music and literature is evident in many of his works both thematically and visually.
Several themes are captured in separate periods and series of works such as Gallipoli, The St Kilda period, Dimboola, Leda and the Swan and the Sonnets. But perhaps the most powerful and recurrent imagery is his iconic depictions of Ned Kelly, the idealistic bushranger and murderer well known in Australian folklore. This series began in 1945 and continued to surface in different techniques throughout Nolan’s lifetime.
I like to use symbolic imagery from traditional culture in my work as there are many layers of meaning for me. But with these new paintings I am not just looking for symbolism and meaning, but also concentrating on the aesthetic to create paintings of beauty.
With this current series of works I am seeking to represent the Childhood images, Chinese Zen style traditional ink and brush paintings and Asian comic characters in a new way; to give an ancient and pop image a contemporary look, to bring the symbol into a new technological context.
The modern printing process and digital technologies use the dot to produces images. I use a hand-painted dot to create my works.
The colours I use are often found in Chinese folk art and embroidery; I choose colours which have the strongest contrast to create tension in the work. Old technique versus new technique, traditional versus modern; color versus color. But still, I want to create paintings of beauty. Song Ling 2009
The works in this series take their inspiration from Hinduisms most holy site, the ancient north Indian city of Varanasi, situated on the Ganges River. Painted in situ on the city’s ghats (stone steps which descend the rivers bank), these works focus on the everyday ritual bathing performed by locals and pilgrims from all over India, and explore the beauty of one of the worlds great cultural centres.
James Stephenson trained at the Julian Ashton School and has won numerous awards including The Henry Gibbons Prize for Drawing in 1999.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
GALLERY NEWS 19 JANUARY 2010: Geoffrey Proud, Tim Storrier, Ann Thomson

tel: 02 9362 0297 fax: 02 9362 0318
email: art@evabreuerartdealer.com.au
website: www.evabreuerartdealer.com.au
Painting of the Week
Geoffrey Proud (b.1946)

Sunday Morning 2007
Oil on canvas
59.5 x 90cm
no.9715
Visit our web site to view other paintings by Geoffrey Proud
Focus On Tim Storrier
Tim Storrier (b.1949)
At the age of nineteen in 1968, Tim Storrier was the youngest ever recipient of the Sulman Prize, an award also conferred on him in 1984. He studied graphic design at the National Art School, Sydney, and has travelled extensively to the USA, Europe, China and the Middle East. His study tours to Egypt and Central Australia conveyed to him the vastness of the landscape and remote civilisations. The 'Burning Rope' series began as a site-specific installation in Central Australia and portrays a line of fire invisibly suspended between two points, mirroring the horizon line in the distance. Storrier is interested in the spiritual significance of reduced landscapes, the ephemeral gestures left by human interaction with nature and fire as representation of both devastation and renewal. There is a tension in his work between beauty and decay: his evocative use of texture and colour in the atmospheric effects at daybreak and dusk, are counterbalanced by destructive or gruesome elements like fire, snakes and slabs of meat.

The Night Wind 2009
oil on canvas
61.5 x 122.5 cm
no.11149
Visit our website to view other important Australian paintings

Desert
Oil on board
104 x 140cm
signed 'Storrier' lower right
no.10151
Oil on board
104 x 140cm
signed 'Storrier' lower right
no.10151
Baggage Roll and Iron 1984
Mixed media
82.5 x 133.5cm
no.3524
Mixed media
82.5 x 133.5cm
no.3524
Tim Storrier’s Baggage Roll and Iron 1984 is a mixed media collage produced during his visit to Giza, Egypt. The early 1980s were an important turning point for Storrier as in 1983 he held his first international solo exhibition to critical acclaim at London’s Fischer Fine Art Gallery. In 1984 he travelled to Egypt to develop a series of commissioned works and found a new strengthened focus in the still life, which would form the basis of his art practice during this period.
Baggage Roll and Iron builds upon the appearance and conceptional notions present in his early 1980s ‘Surveyor’ series as the familiar combination of constructed and found objects are painstakingly arranged on the paper. In Baggage Roll and Iron Storrier continues his interest in the tension between the Australian masculine of mythology and the ‘feminine’ craftsmanship of the ‘made weathered’ objects as well as the dichotomy between the landscape as untamed ground and Australia as mapped and colonised. Baggage Roll and Iron is an important moment in Storrier’s career and was uniquely produced in Giza.

Night Run 2007
Collagraph 51/70
57 x 112.5cm
Signed 'Storrier' LR, titled, date
no.9411
This collagraph is made by building up multiple colour layers in the print, using several wooden plates. Next the ink is applied to the plate using a series of hard or soft rollers, for various effects, in a process called relief printing, where the design is raised up on the surface of the block. The ink plate and paper are then rolled through the press. A variable is adjusting the amount of pressure in the press to get different effects. During the printing process, if the image requires it, some areas are wiped back to provide a soft edge or tonal variation. There can be as many as eighty colours and up to eight plates for each edition. There are generally three stages of printing, working from the lightest colours to the darkest. At each stage the areas inked up on each plate are carved away, this is referred to as reduction printing.

Still Life 1987
Lithograph 93/100
56.5 x 76cm (paper size)
dated, titled & signed 'Still Life Storrier 1987' lower right
edition number lower left
Commissioned by the New South Wales Cancer Council for its
Bicentennial Collection: A Portfolio of Australian artists
no.7718
Important Australian Abstract Paintings
Ann Thomson (b.1933)
Ann Thomson (b.1933)
Dick Watkins (b.1937)
A pioneer of Australian abstract painting, Dick Watkins is represented in many Australian public collections, such as the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Art Gallery of South Australia, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Queensland Art Gallery, as well as in many regional, private and corporate art collections.
Dick Watkins was at the forefront of artists exhibiting and promoting abstraction at Sydney’s Central Street Gallery from 1966-69. At this time, many of Australia’s expatriate artists living and working in London returned to Sydney and the creation of Central Street Gallery aimed to show Australia the exciting range of new artistic styles including Pop, Colour-field, Hard-edge, Minimalism and Conceptual art that were happening internationally. Watkins has been included in important group exhibitions, such as in 1968, The Field, held at the National Gallery of Victoria. A retrospective exhibition of Watkin’s work was held in 1989 at the Wagga Wagga Regional Art Gallery and in 1993 the National Gallery of Australia held the exhibition Dick Watkins in context: an Exhibition from the collection of the National Gallery.
Dick Watkins lives and works in Sydney, Australia. Influences from cubism, pop art, Picasso and the American abstract expressionists, particularly Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell and Willem De Kooning, can be seen in the above work.
Stan Rapotec (1913-1997)

Untitled 1960
Oil on board
75 x 100 cm
Illustrated: Bojic, Z., Stanislav Rapotec, a Barbarogenius in Australian art,
Andrejevic Endowment 2007, picture b/w 1, page 142.
no. 5876
Stanislaus Rapotec was one of the leading exponents of Abstract Expressionism in Australia. He is represented in the Australian National Gallery, all state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other important public collections both in Australia and overseas including the Australian Embassy, Paris, Vatican Gallery of Modern Religious Art, Musée d'Art Moderne, Paris. Rapotec has been the recipient of many awards including the 1961 Blake Prize.
In Untitled 1960 the bold and energetic brushstrokes swirl and explode across the board, masterfully capturing the artists physical and emotional gestures.
Alun Leach-Jones (b.1937)

Instrument for a Solitary Navigator No. 11 1994
Synthetic polymer paint on canvas
137 x 117 cm
no. 9740
Born in the UK in 1937, Leach-Jones works can be found in many international and national public collections such as the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Museum of Modern Art, New York; The British Museum, London; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Parliament House Collection, Canberra; and Art Bank, Sydney. As well as many regional art Galleries, university collections and Private collections throughout Australia, U.S.A., U.K., Switzerland, Wales and New Zealand. Leach-Jones moved to Sydney in 1960 where he now resides and works.
Leach-Jones has had over seventy solo exhibitions and was elected an Honorary Life Fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers, London.
Carl Plate (1909 - 1997)

Third Edge 1961
Oil on board
181 x 121 cm
Signed 'Carl Plate '61' lower left
Signed and inscribed with title, verso:
'EDGE/CARL PLATE'
Exhibited: Sydney, Royal Agricultural Show
no. 8138
Plate’s Third Edge 1961 is a monumental painting which exemplifies the immediacy found in the very best paintings of this period.
Carl Plate was born in Perth and studied at the National Art School in Sydney. He then travelled and studied abroad before returning to Sydney in 1940, where he had a remarkable influence on local artists through the establishment of his famous Notanda Gallery in Rowe Street, Sydney. He was a highly gifted painter who moved from figurative abstraction in the 50’s to pure abstraction during the 1960s and 70s.
Plate has won prizes such as the McCaughey Prize in 1968 and the Aubusson Tapestry Prize in 1967. Plate is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, regional galleries in NSW as well as institutions in London, New York, Paris and important corporate and private collections in Australia.
Sale Section
Garry Shead (b.1942)
Garry Shead (b.1942)
Untitled 3 / VII 1976 is a wonderful example of Shead’s skill with watercolour. The repeated curve within the vertical composition and the delicate, translucent tones give the subject a sense of weightlessness. This painting is influenced by Picasso’s Vollard Suite.
Jean Sutherland (1902-1978)
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.
Sali Herman (1898-1993)

English Wedding 1953-58
Oil on canvas
46 x 61cm
Signed 'S Herman 53/58' lower right
Provenance: Queensland Art Gallery
no.7179
Sali Herman is recognised as one of Australia's most important painters. His work is held in all Australian State galleries, the National Gallery of Australia, and many regional galleries and other public collections. A major retrospective of his work toured Australia in 1981. Sali Herman has been the recipient of many coveted awards including the Wynne prize in 1944, 1962 and 1965, and the Sulman prize in 1946 and 1948.
English Wedding 1953-58 exemplifies the strength and individuality for which Sali Herman is celebrated. There is a modelled texture to the surface of the painting. Layers of colour have been worked over each other in order to create a sense of energy and depth.
Featured Graphic
John Olsen (b.1928)
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January
Gallery 1 & 2: Summer Exhibition
Upcoming Exhibitions
February
Gallery 1 & 2: Summer Exhibition
March
Gallery 1: Autumn Exhibition
Gallery 2: Wayne Eager
April
Gallery 1: Autumn Exhibition
Gallery 2: Pam Sackville
Please send us an email if you wish to be added to the weekly newsletter list.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Collection: Still Life Paintings
Paintings by Margaret Olley, Judy Cassab, Charles Blackman, Roland Wakelin, Geoffrey Proud, Patrick Hockey, Brian Dunlop, Jean Sutherland, Justin O'Brien, Lisa Young, Rosemary Valadon, Brian Seidel, Victor Rubin, Don Rankin, Petra Reece, Mary Larnach-Jones, Zai Kuang, Elisabeth Kruger, Ena Joyce, Ross Harvey, Sarah Edmondson, Sophie Dunlop, Christopher Beaumont, Angela Abbot, Harold Abbot, Pam Sackville, and Jean Appleton.
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