Showing posts with label Stan Rapotec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stan Rapotec. Show all posts

Friday, January 22, 2010

Gallery 1: Important Australian Art

John Coburn
Study for 'In the Beginning was the Word' c.1991
Mixed media on paper
24 x 32cm
signed lower right: Coburn
inscribed with title lower centre
Provenance: The Artist
no.6797

John Coburn
Study for screenprint 'Dreaming Land' c.1981
Mixed media on paper
20 x 32cm
signed lower right: Coburn
inscribed with title lower centre
Provenance: The Artist
no.6803
cat no.35

John Coburn (1925-2006)
Desert Landscape II 1979
Oil on canvas on board
49 x 61cm
no. 3550a
cat no.4

Stan Rapotec (1913-1997)
Untitled, 1960
Oil on board
75 x 100cm
no.5876

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

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Central Australian Landscape c.1981
Ripolin enamel on board
90 x 121 cm
signed lower right: Nolan
no.5552

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Flowers 1985
Spray enamel on canvas
177 x 155 cm (sight size)
183 x 160.2 cm (stretcher size)
initialled lower right: N
no.2813

Roger Kemp (1908-1987)
Untitled c.1963
Acrylic on masonite
91.5 x 122cm
no.5320

Garry Shead
Dancer c.1998
Oil on board
59 x 43 cm
no.11134

Donald Friend (1915-1989)
At Alawa c.1963
Mixed media on paper
77 x 57cm (sight size)
Provenance: Private Collection Sydney
no.1548a

Tim Storrier
The Night Line / Comet 2009
acrylic on canvas
61.5 x 122.5 cm
no.11150

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

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

GALLERY NEWS 19 JANUARY 2010: Geoffrey Proud, Tim Storrier, Ann Thomson

83 Moncur Street Woollahra NSW 2025
tel: 02 9362 0297 fax: 02 9362 0318
email: art@evabreuerartdealer.com.au


Painting of the Week

Geoffrey Proud (b.1946)

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)

Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
The Night Line / Comet 2009
Acrylic on canvas
61.5 x 122.5 cm
no.11150


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.


Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
The Night Wind 2009
oil on canvas
61.5 x 122.5 cm
no.11149


Visit our website to view other important Australian paintings


Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
Desert
Oil on board
104 x 140cm
signed 'Storrier' lower right
no.10151



Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
Baggage Roll and Iron 1984
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.



Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
Mandalay
Collagraph 1/70
58.5 x 112.5cm (image)
70 x 120.5cm (paper)
no.11142



Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
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.



Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
Towards an Innuendo of Impermanence 1981
Photograph
59.5 x 50cm
no.9779



Tim Storrier (b. 1949)
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)
Transmition
Oil on linen
122 x 153cm
no.10705



Dick Watkins (b.1937)

Dick Watkins (b.1937)
Ulysses 1989
Oil on canvas
167 x 244 cm
no.9733

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)

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)

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)

Carl Plate (1909 - 1977)
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)
ItalicUntitled 3 / VII 1976
Ink and watercolour on paper
36 x 26cm
no.6293

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 (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.



Sali Herman (1898-1993)

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)

John Olsen (b.1928)
Lily Pond
Etching 29/30
17 x 15cm (plate size)
38 x 29cm (sheet size)
no.11034



Current Exhibition

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

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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Staff Picks - Gallery Administrator Ciara Derkenne

Victor Rubin (b.1950)
Physcoreal Head II
acrylic on canvas on board
19 x 23.5cm
no. 11158

Victor Rubin is represented in all major public collections in Australia including the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Queensland Art Gallery. His work has been collected by some of the most important private and corporate collections of Australian art including the Patrick White collection and the ICI collection.

Arthur Boyd (1920-1999)
Portrait of Alannah Coleman III c.1971
Oil on canvas
76 x 63 cm
no.3168

Arthur Boyd’s paintings of art world personalities such as this portrait of the art dealer Alannah Coleman, are masterfully executed expressions of the sitter. Boyd translates the nuances of his subject in vigorous strokes of yellow, blue and red, which animate the painterly surface.

Ena Joyce (b.1926)
London Child With Perambulator 1949
Oil on wood
36 x 48.5cm
no.7299

Whilst in London after winning the 1946 NSW Travelling Art Scholarship Ena Joyce painted some of her most highly regarded paintings. London Child with Perambulator 1949 is an evocative work executed with great economy and brisk brush work.

"The small girl stands by the Thames with a mud island behind her. This was at Chiswick Reach, painted several times by Victor Passmore." Ena Joyce

Ena Joyce is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, most state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other public collections throughout Australia including the Parliament House collection. She has won numerous coveted awards including the 1977 Portia Geach Memorila Prize.

Brenda Humble (b.1933)
Bogan Man 1996
Mild steel 1/4
50 x 18 x 9cm
Signed 'Humble 96', editioned and titled on base
no.9190

Humble's body of jewel-like still life's, abstracted in varying degrees are painterly, boldly colourful and beautifully simple. Her continuing motif; the silhouette of vase and flowers against an open window, is distinct and distilled to essential elements and colour blocks. Her palette is high keyed like Mattisse and in some of the still lives, the flatness and bold outline of shapes is somewhat reminiscent of Picasso. Her sculptures share a similar simplification of form; Humble pares back the image to its most elemental lines, creating crisp linea images of quirky teachers, laughing horses, squinting love hearts and little Alice figures.

Jamie Boyd (b.1948)
Sonata
Lithograph 44/275
74 x 102cm
no.0516

Jamie Boyd continues the tradition of the great Boyd family who have collectively made a profound contribution to Australian art though he has established a firm reputation as a painter in his own right. Jamie currently lives in London though he regularly returns to Australia and visits the Boyd property at Shoalhaven where he is reunited with the surrounding landscape and it’s beauty and strength. His works reflects this broad international sensibility and the enduring influence of the Australian landscape. A proficient painter, he has achieved success through many solo and group exhibitions both in Australia and Europe.

James Gleeson (1915-2008)
The Activist 1976
Mixed media on paper
26.7 x 23.9cm
no.2352

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.

Mark Howson (b.1961)
Untitled (Abstract) 1985
Oil on paper
77 x 52.4cm
no.6564

In 1982 Mark Howson was one of the founding members of Roar Studios. Together with about twenty young artists, among whom included David Larwill, Mark Schaller, Wayne Eager and Mike Nicholls, Howson started an artist run gallery in Fitzroy, Melbourne – the purpose of which was to challenge the art establishment. Characterised by strong, expressionistic figurative works, ironically, the Roar artists quickly became noticed by the mainstream art world. Howson’s work is represented in the Australian National Gallery, Canberra; National Gallery of Victoria; New Parliament House, Canberra; Art Bank; numerous Regional and University collections and private collections in Australia, Europe and the USA.

Zai Kuang (b.1962)
Girl 21, 2008
Oil on canvas
30 x 30cm
no.10047

Most of my paintings are about children, toys and their surroundings. The reason I choose children as my subject is that: simplicity, purity and harmony, they are my attentions during the process of making painting. I think children match the thought perfectly.

I paint children in the interior and exterior. In the interior, I want to explore the relationships between children and toys. The space often dominates the works, there is a tranquil atmosphere around the children, the toys and the room. In the exterior, I look for the relationships between children and the environment, usually the space is more open. - Zai Kuang 2009

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Halycon
oil on canvas on board
30 x 37 cm
signed lower right
no.9720

“This enchanting work dating from Nolan's early career in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda makes reference, through its title Halcyon, to an ancient Greek myth associated with the kingfisher, depicted here at rest on its floating nest. According to legend the father of the young Halcyon ordered the winds to stay calm during the brooding period so that the floating nest of the kingfisher would not be disturbed. Hence the term "halcyon days".

For Sidney Nolan his early days in St Kilda might indeed be called halcyon. During the mid 1940s the artist painted an extensive body of works recording life around Luna Park and at the St Kilda sea baths, including reminiscences from his childhood. In addition Nolan also painted numerous images relating to the Greek myth of Icarus, transposed into the environs of St Kilda.
Halcyon‚ was a work of particular personal attachment for Nolan, to the extent that he loaned the painting with the Art Gallery of New South Wales for an extended number of years. Nolan was especially attached to his early work as it provided him with immense stimulus for later projects. As Halcyon‚ is depiction of two of his favourite subjects birds and mythology, it is understandable why this painting was so treasured by the artist.”

Text by curator and art writer: Damian Smith


Stan Rapotec (1913-1997)
Untitled, 1960
Oil on board
75 x 100cm
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.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Staff Picks - Gallery Manager Robert Maconachie

Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992)
Portrait of John Perceval with a Model Boat 1943
Ripolin enamel on board
63.5 x 76 cm
no.6368

Provenance:
The Estate of Sir Sidney Nolan

Exhibited:
Nolan’s Nolans: A Reputation Reassessed, Agnews and Sons, London 1997, cat no.10

Literature:
Nolan’s Nolans: A Reputation Reassessed, Agnews and Sons, London 1997, cat no.10, p.10.
Rosenthal. T.G., Sidney Nolan, Thames and Hudson, London, 2002, p. 48.

Painted while stationed at the Wimmera, Portrait of John Perceval with Model Boat 1943 is a portrait of Nolan’s close friend and fellow artist John Perceval. Perceval is shown gazing at a small model ship, (prefiguring Perceval's Williamstown series) which he has clutched to his chest. This also eludes to Baudelaire’s Le Bateau Ivre (The Drunken Boat). A square window through the figure’s torso allows us a view to a painting within the painting; a beach scene from the St Kilda series, which pictures the Greek legend of Icarus1, the tale of the boy whose attempt to fly to the sun ended in tragic failure.

As Nicholas Usherwood explains, the inclusion of the model boat may also relate to the theme of Icarus which goes back to Nolan’s work for the Lifar Ballet, see cat. no.5 Eyes (Tent Series) c.1940. It may also suggest the “wreck of youth and Nolan’s other wise well–concealed anxieties about the war in the Pacific, in particular a recent unsuccessful Australian naval engagement in the Macassar straights of the North Australia cost – Nolan had a brother, Raymond in the Navy. He may have also begun to feel anxious about being sent to fight in New Guinea, later the cause for his desertion from the army.”2
RM

1 Nolan’s Nolans: A Reputation Reassessed, Agnews and Sons, London, 1997, cat. no.9.
2 ibid


Garry Shead (b.1942)
Monarchy at Sunset 1995
Oil on canvas
122 x 155 cm
Signed 'Garry Shead 95' lower left
no.1606

Illustrated: Grishin., S, Garry Shead, Encounters with Royalty,
Craftsman House 1998, plate 3, page 37.

Exhibited: Lyall Burton Gallery, Melbourne
Touring Exhibition, Brisbane City Gallery, 1998

Provenance: Lyall Burton Gallery, Melbourne
Eva Breuer Art Dealer, Sydney

Monarchy at Sunset 1995 is one of the largest major paintings from the early period of the important 'Royal Suite' series.

The painting is illustrated in the definitive text on the series and is one of the largest paintings from the beginning of the series in 1995. The composition is a complex one involving multiple large figures including both the Queen and the Consort. The painting also includes the other essential images of the best paintings of the series; the harbour bridge, the silhouetted kangaroo, the Koala and the sprig of golden wattle.

Roland Wakelin (1887-1971)
Terrace Houses Double Bay 1963
Oil on board
45 x 64 cm
Signed 'R.Wakelin 63' bottom left
no.11144

Provenance:
Private collection, Melbourne
Private collection, Sydney

Exhibited:
Toorak Art Gallery (label attached verso) - On loan from Mr P English
Geelong Art Gallery (label attached verso)
Roland Wakelin Retrospective Art Gallery of NSW 8 - 30 April 1967 cat no.87
Roland Wakelin: Master of Colour, A Newcastle Regional Gallery Touring exhibition, 2002
Toured to Newcastle City Art Gallery 10-13 May 1967

Illustrated:
Roland Wakelin: Master of Colour, A Newcastle Regional Gallery Touring exhibition, 2002

Like his contemporary "colourist" Roy de Maistre, Roland Wakelin was Australian modernism's expert in colour harmony. He uses classical subject matter - landscape, cityscape or still life - then applies high keyed colours for a gentle modernist effect . His life's work was the subject of a major retrospective at the Art Gallery of NSW in 1967, which holds a number of exemplary Wakelin pieces. He taught at the School of Architecture, University of Sydney, from 1952, and is represented in all major public galleries in Australia.

Danila Vassilieff (1897-1958)
Untitled (Two Boys and Dog) c.1941
Oil on board
34 x 26cm
Signed 'Vassilieff' lower right
Provenance: The Williams family, Queensland
click here to view the verso
no.8198


This painting pictures two young boys, Bryan and Barry Williams (and their dog, Macky). It was painted at Warrandyte, Victoria, where the parents of the boys were building a mud brick house in the early 1940s. They became acquainted with the artist Vassilieff, as he was building his stone house in the area around the same time. Years later this painting was discovered by Bryan's wife, hidden under a framed newspaper image of a replica Captain Cook's cottage that was owned by the boys' father, Vyvian Williams.

Brett Whiteley (1939-1992)
Untitled (Bird) 1978
Oil on board with mixed media
82 x 85.5cm
Signed 'Brett Whiteley 78' lower left
Provenance: Private collection Sydney
no.8781

Brett Whiteley created some of the most important paintings of twentieth century Australian Art. His mastery of, and unique approach to form, colour, light and gesture in a body of work which spans subjects from birds to boulders, have made him one of the icons of not only the Australian art world but also internationally.

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.

Three of Brett Whiteley’s most memorable solo exhibitions were devoted to the theme of birds in 1979, 1983 and 1988. “It is not too fanciful to think of Whiteley’s bird paintings as self portraits”, Barry Pearce has commented. “He loved them since childhood and in his last phase of work they became symbols of both domesticity and freedom.” Reference: The Australian Magazine, 26 August, 1995, p.16.

“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.

Stan Rapotec (1913-1997)
Untitled, 1960
Oil on board
75 x 100cm
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.

Carl Plate (1909-1977)
Third Edge 1961
Oil on board
181 x 121cm
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. Click here to view a study of this work.

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.

Plate’s Third Edge 1961 is a monumental painting which exemplifies the immediacy found in the very best paintings of this period.

Elisabeth Kruger (b.1955)
Cirque 2008
oil on linen
122.5 x 153cm
no.10884

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.

Roger Kemp (1908-1987)
Untitled c.1963
Acrylic on masonite
91.5 x 122cm
no.5320

Roger Kemp is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, all state galleries, many regional galleries as well as many other public collections throughout Australia. Kemp has been the recipient of numerous coveted awards including the 1968 and 1970 Blake Prize.

Kemp’s contribution to the development of abstract painting in Australia is substantial. He has shown how a personal language can be developed from experience with effort and tenacity without recourse to models from abroad.”

In Untitled c.1963 the bold black outlines that border the blocks of red, blue, green and white is reminiscent of stain-glass artwork.

Reference: Roger Kemp: Cycle and Directions 1935 –1975, Monash University Department of Visual arts, Exhibition Gallery, Melbourne: The Gallery, 1978 pp.1-2.

Arthur Boyd (1920-1999)
Portrait of Alannah Coleman III c.1971
Oil on canvas
76 x 63 cm
no.3168

Arthur Boyd’s paintings of art world personalities such as this portrait of the art dealer Alannah Coleman, are masterfully executed expressions of the sitter. Boyd translates the nuances of his subject in vigorous strokes of yellow, blue and red, which animate the painterly surface.
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