Australian & Aboriginal Art

From Dreamtime to Masterpieces, let’s embark on a journey through Australian & Aboriginal Artistry.

Latest posts

  • Pro Hart (1928-2006)

    Nicknamed ‘Pro’ as a symbol of his artistic talent, Kevin Charles Hart has become a household name in Australia. Better known as Pro Hart, he is regarded as the father of the renowned outback painting movement, the prolific painter of primitive-regional pictures took a unique approach to his art to effectively capture the true essence…

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  • Charles Blackman (1928 – 2018)

    Born in Sydney in 1928, Charles Blackman spent his childhood in Queensland before leaving school at the age of thirteen to work as an illustrator for the Sydney Sun newspaper while attending classes at the East Sydney Technical School. He kept his illustrating job for five years and studied between 1943 and 1946. When Blackman…

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  • Fred Williams (1927- 1982)

    Recognised as one of the most significant Australian painters and graphic artists of the twentieth century for his figurative and landscape works, Fred Williams was in the forefront of the Australian modern art movement. Williams was born in Richmond in 1927. Although he is considered to be a largely self-taught artist, he received his initial…

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  • Elioth Gruner (1882- 1939)

    Elioth Gruner was born in 1882 at Gisborne, Poverty Bay in New Zealand to an Irish Mother (Mary Ann Brennan) and Norwegian Father (Elliott Gruner Snr). His family moved to Australia in 1883 where his art education began in 1894 at the age of 14, attending drawing lessons at the Julian Ashton Art School while…

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  • Emanuel Phillips Fox (1865 – 1915)

    Regarded one of Australia’s most gifted colourists and figure painters, Emanuel Phillips Fox became a greatly celebrated member of the art world for the way he captured the effects of sunlight in his works and combined Impressionist-oriented vision with academic training. Born in Fitzroy, Melbourne in 1865, Fox began his art education at the age…

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  • George Lambert (1875 – 1930)

    Born in St Petersburg, Russia, 1873, George Washington Lambert arrived in Australia with his mother in 1887 where they took up residence at Eurobla, a sheep station near Warren owned by his great-uncle Robert Firth. Lambert’s art studies began in 1896 at Sydney’s Julian Ashton Art School where he was taught under the instruction of…

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  • Russell Drysdale (1912 – 1981)

    Regarded as the pioneer of Australian modern regional painting Russell Drysdale is one of Australia’s most celebrated artists. Breaking radically with the Heidelberg School’s romanticized view of rural Australia Drysdale used the originality of his artistic style and vision to effectively shape an alternative national identity based on his own honest depictions of the harsh…

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  • Rupert Bunny (1864 – 1947)

    As a dexterous, eclectic painter whose work varied from large-scale compositions to highly decorative scenes of feminine familiarity, Rupert Chales Wulsten Bunny became celebrated as one of Australia’s finest artists and a key player in the modern art movement. Born at St Kilda, Melbourne in 1864, Rupert Bunny received an extensive education focused on the…

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  • John Perceval (1923 – 2000)

    Born in Bruce Rock, Western Australia on 1 February 1923, John Perceval moved to Melbourne with his mother in 1934. Attending a local boarding school, Trinity Grammar, here he had his first access to a large library, where the school’s collection of art books left a profound impact on the teenager. Greatly influenced by Van…

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