Showing 9751 items matching "drawing."
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, SWANN, Heather B, How the mind works: Cloud, 2012
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, TAYLOR, Vicky, Portraits of Jo, 1986
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, WATTERS, Donald, Self portrait, 1986
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, WEGNER, Peter, Room 19, 2017
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, WESTBROOK, Eric Ernest, Hero in Autumn, 1990
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, WRIGHT, Douglas, A nightwalker's meander, 1984
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Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery
Drawing, ZIVKOVIC, Slavica, The Place of Spirit, 2015
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Photograph: Dena ASHBOLT (b.UK, arrived 1982 AUS), Dena Ashbolt, Waking Time, 2012
'Waking Time' is part of the series ' So when do you throw the flowers out?', which exhibited at Melbourne's Alcaston Gallery from 8 May - 1 June 2012.In this series Dena Ashbolt used photographic pigment prints, video and Raku Nu ceramic funery urn drawings, to explore time as evidenced by movement and references the beauty of aging. Ashbolt has a continuing interest engaging with the concepts of time, its flow and passing - as evident in this series. Ashbolt has been a regular finalist at the Nillumbik Prize Contemporary Art and in 2009 was awarded the Prize for the video drawing 'Wet Feet Under the Pier'. Ashbolt is a inter-disciplinary artist whose practice ranges from photography and printmaking through to filmmaking and collaborative performance projects.Pigment Print on Hahnemuhle Paper Edition of 7AK18136 PNT817dena ashbolt, photographic print -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Photograph: Dena ASHBOLT (b.UK, arrived 1982 AUS), Dena Ashbolt, Countless Daughters, 2012
'Countless Daughters' is part of the series ' So when do you throw the flowers out?', which exhibited at Melbourne's Alcaston Gallery from 8 May - 1 June 2012In this series Dena Ashbolt used photographic pigment prints, video and Raku Nu ceramic funery urn drawings, to explore time as evidenced by movement and references the beauty of aging. Ashbolt has a continuing interest engaging with the concepts of time, its flow and passing - as evident in this series. Ashbolt has been a regular finalist at the Nillumbik Prize Contemporary Art and in 2009 was awarded the Prize for the video drawing 'Wet Feet Under the Pier'. Ashbolt is a inter-disciplinary artist whose practice ranges from photography and printmaking through to filmmaking and collaborative performance projects. Pigment Print on Hahnemuhle Paper Edition of 7AK18137 PNT809photographic pigment prints, dena ashbolt -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Print (lithograph) Peter WEGNER (b.1954 NZ - a.1958 AUS), Peter Wegner, Mandarin on Kitchen Table, 1983
This work is by a local contemporary artist with a national and international reputation for figurative and portrait works. This lithograph comes from a series of still life by Wegner from the early 80's; a subject matter in which he has not returned to. Wegner is well known for his drawings and enjoys the immediate and directness of the process. He sees the drawn image as an experience of observation, with the content revealing the process of its making. Lithographic print - still life in black and white. Details several kitchen/household items: spoon, tea pot, egg holder, cup and saucer, bowl, chop sticks and mandarin.Lower far left: 'A/P'; Low centre: 'Mandarin on Kitchen Table'; Lower far right: 'PW 83'wegner, lithograph, still life, black and white, utensils, table, fruit, print -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Paul MARGOCSY (b.1945 MELB AUS), Greater Glider, c.1984
Watercolour painting, side view of a Greater Glider sitting on the branch of a eucalypt tree with white background Lower right, black pen, signature 'Paul Margocsy' -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Reinis ZUSTERS (b.1918 Ukraine, arr.1950 Aus - d.1999 NSW Aus), Sunday Morning Montsalvat, 1979
Reinis Zusters OAM was born 15 October 1918 in Odessa, Ukraine, of Latvian parents. Zusters’ father died before he was two years old and he was raised in an orphanage from an early age. He had one sister. He studied Art at the Riga Technical College, Latvia, from 1935 to 1940. He married Aldija Kapteinis, and they had a daughter, Rudite (born 1942 in Riga). After World War II the Zusters family were refugees. They reached Western Australia in 1950, where they stayed for 6 months before moving to Canberra, ACT. In 1952, Zusters moved from Canberra to Pennant Hills in Sydney with his second wife, Arija Biks. Their daughter Laura was born in Sydney in 1956. In 1966, Zusters met his future third wife, Venita Salnajs. In 1969, Zusters bought a house in Greenwich, Sydney. He married Venita on September 17, 1976, and they moved to Wentworth Falls in the Blue Mountains. Zusters died on 8 October, 1999 at Wentworth Falls, and was cremated at Rookwood Crematorium, Sydney. His ashes are buried in the Latvian section of Rookwood Cemetery. Zusters studied at the Technical College of Riga (Latvia), and at East Sydney Technical College, Australia. He was influenced by his Latvian cultural heritage, and admired the artist Voldemars Tone (1892-1958). Shortly after arrival in Australia, Zusters became a draughtsman with the Department of Works and Housing in Canberra. Later he was appointed chief designer with the Australian-American architectural firm Austin-Anderson, at St. Leonards, Sydney. Zusters practised as a full-time professional artist from 1968. Zusters was a prolific painter, predominantly in oils. He produced many large landscapes, including triptychs of the Blue Mountains. His landscapes were mountain scenes prepared in the manner of Jackson Pollock and completed with washes and pale glazes of colour. His cityscapes featured a rich paint surface and sharp-edged thickness of paint applied with a palette knife, layer upon layer. He painted urban scenes of Sydney, inland Australian scenes, and several major portraits including Sir Winston Churchill’s gardener (purchased by Art Gallery of NSW). He made many small informal portrait-drawings of friends. His usual signature was “Zusters”. His work is represented in numerous public and private collections in Australia and abroad. He won numerous prestigious awards in Australia, Japan and USA and was honoured with the Order of Australia Medal in 1994. -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Hilary JACKMAN (b.1943 Melb, AUS), Allwood House, Hurstbridge
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Margot KROYER-PEDERSON (b.1931 - d.1997), Frogmouths
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Ian BOW (b.1914 - d.1989 AUS), Templestowe Pub
Ian Bow studied at the Melbourne Technical College. He is best known both as a painter and as a sculptor. His works are represented in several state and provincial galleries. -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Print (etching): Dean BOWEN, The Offering, 1997
Dean Bowen is renowned for his charming, child-like aesthetic and unique thematic interplay between the urban and rural as well as humans and animals. Bowen has developed a distinctive and humorous symbolic language that filters through each work. His highly charismatic and whimsical renderings of animals, human characters and Australian environments celebrate the vicissitudes of life, evincing the simple pleasures of human habitation within the artificial and the natural world. The work and thoughts of Jean Dubuffet, particularly those which focus on the philosophy of 'Art Brut', give support to Dean's belief that untrained artists are more honest, that artists interested in emulating the art of children are trying to regain the pure expression they lost with childhood. 'The Offering' was a finalist in the Nillumbik Art Awards in 1997. The work refers to the act of giving back, rather than taking which Bowen sees as more prevalent in our Western society. While the image is childlike, the expression of the boy is a mixture of sadness and happiness, knowing and naivety, youth and age. The smile has a Mona Lisa quality and the earthy and sensuous colours suggest landscape. When realising the images he relies on memory rather than observation so that the struggle with drawing and representation sometimes doesn't work. The style of the drawing and the flat space relates to the graphic style of cartoons and caricature. The intuitive and the imaginative are essential elements in his work. lower right 'Dean Bowen '97' -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Peter Bryant BURNS (b.1924 AUS), Voyager
Burns studied at Melbourne Technical College and University of Melbourne. An architect and painter he exhibited with the Contemporary Art Society where he was to become secretary and vice president. -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (pencil): Jules Christian BURNS, Untitled 1996, from the folio 'Ideas for Paintings'
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (pencil): Jules Christian BURNS, Untitled, Gift of Sarah McLeish
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 2-9-06 still spring morn 8am KGMT / 3-9-06 long awaited cold front / 26hours
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 1-9-06 KGMT 9am / strong northerly, gusty / 2-9-06 quiet night 23hours
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 9-9-06 9.00am strong easterly / turbulence around hill, spitting / 11.15 2 1/4 (DW)hours
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 8-9-06 cold SW, mist / 9-9-06 easterly, oil (?) drops / 25hours
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 3-9-06 1.00pm KGMT / amid changes, SW / 10am 4-9 clearing / 21hours
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (ink): Cameron ROBBINS, 1-9-06 KGMT / first day of spring / 5hours rain
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Chris MARKS, Unreleting Tempo
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Chris MARKS, Gradually Dissolving
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing: Chris MARKS, Imagine Becoming the Sea
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Drawing (mixed media): Denise KEELE-BEDFORD, Artist Footprint 4
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Nillumbik Shire Council
Print (etching, acquatint, stencil): Jock CLUTTERBUCK (b.1945), Jock Clutterbuck, ‘Frosty Night Cartouche’ from 'The Baldessin & Friends' commemorative folio, 2016
Jock Clutterbuck is a sculptor and printmaker of national significance, known for his sophisticated abstract forms with underlying esoteric mysticism. Clutterbuck overlapped with Baldessin when he studied sculpture and printmaking at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, RMIT (1965-66). He taught at RMIT from (1969-73) before lecturing in sculpture at the Victorian College of the Arts (1974-2000). He is represented in many national and international public art collections and is a recipient of many National prizes and awards. George Baldessin (1939-1978) was a printmaker and sculptor who built his bluestone studio at St Andrews (Nillumbik) in 1971. The bluestone studio was hand built by George, his partner Tess and the three Hails brothers, Rob, Doug and Don. Made of recycled materials the studio today contains all of George’s equipment including the large press, which he modelled himself with the help of Neil Jeffrey (Enjay Presses). George won many prizes throughout his career and is represented in many of Australia's public art collections including his famous 'Pears' sculpture in front of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra. In 1975 he represented Australia in the Sao Paulo Biennale, before living and working in Paris until his return to St Andrews in 1977. In 1978 George was killed in a car accident aged 39 years. In 2001 Tess returned to St Andrews to reclaim the run-down studio and reconstitute it as The Baldessin Press & Studio - a printmaking retreat. It operates in George’s memory, so that artists may continue to create, perpetuating the generous spirit of George.‘Frosty Night Cartouche’ is one of eight prints in the 'Baldessin & Friends commemorative folio. The folio was conceived by Tess Edwards as a fundraising initiative in celebration of the The Baldessin Press & Studio's fifteen year anniversary, and as a way to honour George Baldessin's memory. The Baldessin Press & Studio is a not-for-profit organisation created in memory of the late George Baldessin (1939-1978), whose original studio is now open to the public for creative use and as a practical legacy to living artists. The Studio is located in St Andrews, Nillumbik. The folio is a unique coming together of seven very different and acclaimed artists who are connected by their friendship to the missing eighth member, George Baldessin. Following a visit to the Press in 2015, Clutterbuck was reminded of a suite of paintings he had produced some thirty years earlier inspired by plein-air drawings of the night sky. This print attempts to capture something of the enchantment, mystery and drama of a frosty rural property where Clutterbuck spent many years. It is a frost dreaming; a subtle personal homage to Baldessin, embodying the reverence of a fellow artist towards an old friend. In pencil (handwritten): low plate: left '14/25' (edition); centre 'Frosty Night Cartouche' (title); right 'Jock Clutterbuck' (signature); low paper: right emboss 'GB' (Baldessin Press & Studio monogram)ekphrasis2018, symbols