Exhibition celebrates Arthur Streeton’s contribution to the formation of an Australian identity
An exhibition by the renowned Australian impressionist artist Arthur Streeton (1867 – 1943) entitled Arthur Streeton: Blue and Gold will be on show at Carrick Hill, Springfield, from 25 October 2017 until 25 February 2018.
Arthur Streeton: Blue and Gold will be opened by Geoffrey Edwards, former director of the Geelong Gallery, on Wednesday 25th October 2017 at 6.00pm.
The exhibition, which takes its name from Streeton’s statement; ‘Nature’s scheme of colour in Australia is gold and blue …’ will highlight his depiction of land and seascapes, both in Australia and abroad.
Carrick Hill’s Associate Curator Anna Jug said, ‘The exhibition will comprise around twenty works drawn from public and private collections taking inspiration from the three paintings by Streeton included in the Hayward Bequest here at Carrick Hill.
The show celebrates Streeton’s contribution to the formation of an Australian identity demonstrating Streeton’s treatment of bush, sea, river and mountains in oil paintings, as well as in a number of his sketch studies’.
Sir Arthur Ernest Streeton was born in Mount Duneed, near Geelong, in 1867. Academic life did not appeal and so young Arthur left school in Melbourne at the age of thirteen and took up several different jobs. At nineteen, his creativity and aptitude for sketching led him to being apprenticed as a lithographer to a company in Collins Street.
Streeton held little interest in art theory throughout his life: as a young man he took night classes in drawing at the National Gallery School of Design, but otherwise was self-taught, experimenting with technique. It was the friendship he struck up with Tom Roberts, an artist returned from study at the Royal Academy, which had a profound influence on Streeton. He was invited to an artist camp away from the city in Box Hill, where artists were experimenting with the French technique en plein air. Impressionism had already reached its pinnacle in Europe, but to Arthur Streeton and a stream of young Australian artists, it was ground-breaking, allowing them to see and paint the Australian landscape in a new way.
Anna Jug says Streeton’s painting, An Impression from the Deep, from the collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia, is an example of this. ‘The sound of the crashing waves and taste of the sea spray is almost as tangible to us as it was to Streeton as he painted it. His quick brush strokes and bold colours used during those early days painting at Box Hill and Heidelberg would linger in work throughout his life.’
An Impression from the Deep
1889
Collection of the Art Gallery of South AustraliaStreeton forged a name for himself in Australia and in 1898 he travelled to London where he spent the next twenty years, intermittently returning to Australia for inspiration. Streeton’s name has become synonymous with grand scale works, such as The Victoria Tower, Westminster in which he pays homage to the British Masters.
Victoria Tower, Westminster
1912
Collection of the Art Gallery of South AustraliaThe city of Venice proved a fabulous model for the artist when he honeymooned there in 1908. Carrick Hill’s own Venice, Bride of the Sea is a product of this Italian sojourn and was exhibited in Melbourne along with others in a series called Arthur Streeton’s Venice, which was hugely successful for the artist. His Venetian pictures still rank amongst Streeton’s most iconic works.
Venice, Bride of the Sea
1908Arthur Streeton and his family relocated to Australia permanently in the 1920s with Arthur spending the last eighteen years of his life in Victoria, painting grand landscape works such as The Land of the Golden Fleece. Anna Jug said, ‘Carrick Hill’s The Blue Mountains, a work that is a culmination of a life’s devotion to landscape painting, was painted in those later years. There is a sense of drama created by the shadows in contrast to the light splashes over the rocky crop dominating the foreground. Most importantly, this picture proudly bears the colour scheme of the Australian landscape, blue and gold’.
The Blue Mountains
c. 1920s
Collection of the Carrick Hill Trust, Adelaide;
Hayward Bequest
Exhibition dates: 25 October to 25 February 2018
Admission: $17 Adult, $12 Concession, $36 Family
Tickets may be purchased at the main entry to the house.
Admission to the grounds is free.
Carrick Hill, 46 Carrick Hill Drive, Springfield
open Wednesday to Sundays and Public Holidays 10.00 am to 4:30 pm.
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