CRITICAL: Write a brief (illustrated) summary of what you learnt in the gallery yesterday and/or focussing on the one or two works that you found most challenging or interesting.

What I felt encompassed my learning experience at the New South Wales Art Gallery was the notion of evolution; the quantitative sensation of time moving passed me as I ventured from artwork to artwork. I felt I was watching the Australian identity mould and manifest itself: a process facilitated by both internal and external artistic and cultural influences, such as the impressionistic aspects of French modernism in the painting by E. Phillips Fox: “The Ferry”.

(1919) by Roy de Maistre
From my perspective, Green Minor represented a visualised journey. My tutor, Michael, explained this artform may have been consequent to the shellshock experienced by Australian soldiers in World War I. The circular movement of the painting indeed felt as though I were being shuttled from a dark abyss to warm hope. It appears to me almost a slippery-dip of emotion, tunnelling from dark shades of violet and indigo, hurtling toward an oval of lime green and canary yellow. Amongst it all is a hazy green neutrality. The rhythm and motion of this painting cannot be denied, and I wondered at the artist’s ability to see music in colours.

The first artwork I found most engaging was the ‘Golden Splendour of the Bush’ by W. Lister Lister. There is a glaze of golden-pink colour over the entire artwork, as if stepping into a moment that is the sunset in the outback. The native gumtree stands erect, proud and magisterial. It looms over the viewer with its thick, winding branches outstretched, readied for the viewer’s embrace. Whilst there is a realism that saturates the elements of this piece, there is also an ethereality. This glimpse of untouched, paradisal calm is an illustrated ode to the Australian landscape. And perhaps, from a contemporary perspective such as my own, it is now a requiem for nature–for the timeless beauty of the bush we sometimes cannot perceive.



