A Companion to Australian Art. Группа авторов

Читать онлайн книгу.

A Companion to Australian Art - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
in London and Paris was seen as the ultimate test and accolade.

      Public Art Museology in the Other Australian Colonies

      What, then, was happening in the other Australian colonies from the mid-century? The first phase, with Mechanics’ Institutes and learned societies assuming responsibility for making fine art available to the public, as an expression of civic progress and pride, though with little or no curatorial discipline or thesis, was passing. In Melbourne, a government-funded art collection (and school of art, which, interestingly, became formally linked some years later to the new Working Men’s College, situated on an adjacent site in a Gothic Revival building, the whole program displaying true Ruskinian principles) was bringing focus to a colonial British society’s cultural ambition; furthermore, the two international exhibitions in the 1880s brought to Melbourne thousands of contemporary artworks from around the world (all academic), with several national fine art courts having their own curators and staff.

      In many ways, the process of creating significant public art museums in Melbourne, Hobart and elsewhere reflected earlier experience in the United States where, for example, the Boston Athenæum, founded in 1807 in imitation of the Liverpool Athenæum in England, constructed an art gallery in 1827, which organized regular exhibitions of European and American art. When the larger and more ambitious Museum of Fine Arts was established in 1870, most of the Boston Athenæum collection was transferred to the new institution. The process played out in Philadelphia was similar, but with different outcomes.

      The formal creation of the Art Gallery of NSW took some time, however. In 1874 the government of NSW granted the Academy £500 for the purchase of art works, and the following year William Piguenit’s Mt Olympus, Lake St. Claire, Tasmania was gifted by 50 subscribers. The 1879 International Exhibition in Sydney required a local response in relation to the public collections of NSW, and an annexe to the main exhibition hall was constructed. After the International Exhibition moved on to Melbourne the following year, the annexe was made available, officially opening in September 1880 as the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In emulation of Melbourne – and of course, London, which was the principal exemplar – it was renamed the “National Art Gallery of New South Wales” in 1883, though it was not formally incorporated by Act of Parliament until 1899. After several false starts, a handsome, classicizing sandstone building was completed and opened in 1906. The National Art Gallery of NSW acquired a group of major, mainly British, pictures in these early years – ranging from Ford Madox Brown’s monumental and highly important Chaucer at the Court of Edward III, 1847–1851, purchased for £500 in 1876, to several major works by Leighton, such as Wedded 1882, purchased in the same year after being first exhibited in London. Overall, in the post-Federation period, the Australian content expanded rapidly, and became a major feature of the visitor experience, supported by annual events such as the Wynne Prize, for “the best landscape painting of Australian scenery,” inaugurated in 1897 and continuing to this day.

      The Honorary Curator Harry P. Gill – concurrently the director of Technical Art at the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts – traveled to London in 1899 and enlisted the help of a London advisory committee of experts, led by Sir Edward Poynter, and key works by Burne-Jones, Leighton and Poynter himself were acquired in the next few years. As always, the prevailing taste was British and academic, though Bouguereau’s magisterial Madonna and Child of 1888 was acquired through the Elder Bequest, followed by Burne-Jones’ Perseus and Andromeda, 1876, in 1902.

      The debate on the potential – indeed, necessity – for the six British colonies in Australia to form a national Federation inevitably drew attention to the importance of public institutions building strong collections of Australian art reflecting the Australian experience, and a key response of the Adelaide gallery, once the income of the Elder Bequest became available, was to ringfence a third of the available funds to support the creation of notable national collections, both historic and contemporary. The Adelaide gallery embarked on a series of nine “Federation Exhibitions”, from 1898 to 1909, seeking the best available works by members of the Australian Impressionist/plein-airist/realist and tonal realist groups, beginning with Streeton, McCubbin and Roberts, and the acquisition of Tom Roberts’ early masterpiece The Breakaway in 1898, immediately following its return from the exhibition of Australian art at the Grafton Gallery in London, put Adelaide on the map. Further possibilities were opened up with the funds which became available from a second generous gift, the Morgan Thomas Bequest of 1903.


Скачать книгу