Historical information
Sue Ford (1943-2009) was an important practitioner in the wave of 1970's Australian feminist photographers. Ford regularly took intimate and candid pictures of artist friends, such as 'Neil Douglas Research 1964', documenting a time in Eltham when Montsalvat and Dunmoochin played an important part in the early attraction of artists to the Nillumbik area.
Artist, conservationist and activist Neil Douglas (1911-2003) is best known for his garden at the Bend of Islands, Kangaroo Ground where he formed a co-operative for like-minded people who wished to live in harmony with the bush and wildlife. His love of nature and the beauty and fragility of the bush are constant themes that often run parallel in his ceramic works and paintings.
Significance
Sue Ford and Neil Douglas were artists of national significance who both lived in the local Nillumbik area in the mid to late twentieth century. They were part of a community of artists integral in forging a dynamic artistic spirit, heavily inspired by the region's landscape and its people.
Physical description
Black and white silver gelatin photographic print of Neil Douglas plein-air painting in his rose garden at Research. Ed.1/3
Inscriptions & markings
N/A
References
- Sue Ford Photographer Artist Artist website
- NGV Sue Ford Retrospective exhibition NGV Australia, Federation Square, 17 April 2014-24 August 2014
- NGV Neil Douglas: Kangaroo Platter NGV Art Journal 52, work description platter
- Heide Museum of Modern Art, Garden Talk Neil Douglas: The Wild Gardener Promotion and photo for public art talk