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Talking with Painters

Talking with Painters

Maria Stoljar

Arts

Maria Stoljar talks with Australian painters about how they became an artist, their painting techniques, influences and current work.

Episodes

Ep 172: Ann Thomson on International Women’s Day

Ep 172: Ann Thomson on International Women’s Day

Today Ann Thomson is one of Australia’s most respected and internationally acclaimed artists. A painter and sculptor, she has held more than 60 solo exhibitions, won numerous awards, and her work is represented in major public collections. As this episode is released, an exhibition of her work is also showing at Messums Gallery in London. Links Ann Thomson on Instagram Ann Thomson at Messums Talking with Painters YouTube channel Talking with Painters on Instagram Talking with Painters on Facebook Maria Stoljar on LinkedIn Sign up for the Talking with Painters newsletter Podcast interview with Thomson on her life and art Podcast interview with Thomson on Ian Fairweather Podcast interview with Thomson in her 90th year
27min•Mar 8, 2026
Ep 171:  Mary Tonkin

Ep 171: Mary Tonkin

Ervin Gallery in Sydney, before the start of her survey exhibition Among the Trees (opening 3 January 2026). The show brings together paintings, drawings and ceramics dating from 2008, works that reflect Mary’s deep relationship with her family farm in Victoria’s Dandenong ranges and with painting from life. Her painting ‘Ramble Kalorama’, measuring almost 19 metres long, is a magnificent meditation on what it is to be in the Australian landscape and was a huge hit at the 2022 Sydney Contemporary Art Fair. Mary Tonkin has won many awards and her works are held in major public institutions and private collections. She is represented by Australian Galleries. NB: When Mary speaks about her teacher Geoff in this conversation she is referring to Geoff Dupree. Links Mary Tonkin on Instagram Mary Tonkin at Australian Galleries ‘Among the Trees’, S.H.Ervin Gallery, 3 January to 1 March 2026 Highlights YouTube video My instagram reel of ‘Ramble, Kalorama’ at Sydney Contemporary (2022) https://youtu.be/84JSU210-38?si=78SsLYUPGalbja-g ‘Ramble, Kalorama’ (2017–2019) at Sydney Contemporary, 2022 18.9m x 1.8m (21 panels) Oil on linen ‘Coprosma Madonna, Kalorama’ 2021-22 oil on linen 320 x 610cm Photographer Matthew Stanton ‘Madre, Kalorama’ 2008 oil on linen 244cm x 508 cm Photographer John Brash ‘A scream, Kalorama’ 2023 oil on linen 214 x 366cm Photograph Matthew Stanton ‘Regent, Kalorama’ 2012 charcoal on paper 241 x 271cm Photographer John Brash ‘Saint Anthony Beaten By Devils’ 24.5cm x 39.5cm Sassetta, c1423, 1424 Pinacoteca Nazionale
43min•Dec 28, 2025
Ep 170: Aida Tomescu – ‘Messiaen’

Ep 170: Aida Tomescu – ‘Messiaen’

A highlights video from this episode will also be coming soon to the Talking with Painters YouTube channel In this episode, I visit the studio of acclaimed abstract painter Aida Tomescu just days before the opening of her exhibition Messiaen at Fox Jensen Gallery in Sydney. The exhibition continues until 20 December 2025. Aida Tomescu on Instagram Aida Tomescu website Aida Tomescu at Fox Jensen Gallery Talking with Painters website Talking with Painters on Instagram Subscribe here for my monthly newsletter Previous TWP YouTube videos of Aida Tomescu: Aida Tomescu – extended interview Aida Tomescu talks with Maria Stoljar (uncut) Aida Tomescu in her studio (2017) Aida Tomescu talks with Maria Stoljar about ‘Tuckson: the abstract sublime’ Aida Tomescu’s 2019 show ‘The Open Wounds of White Clouds’ Previous podcast conversations with Aida Tomescu: Episode 33 – Aida Tomescu Episode 63 – Aida Tomescu on Tony Tuckson Episode 116 – Aida Tomescu (uncut) Messiaen II 2024 200x460cm oil on Belgian linen Photo: Jenni Carter Messiaen III 2025 200 x 306cm Oil on Belgian linen Photo: Jenni Carter Messiaen 2013 oil and pigments on canvas 184 x 153 cm This is the work Tomescu refers to at the beginning of the episode
N/A•Nov 21, 2025
Ep 169: 12 finalists, 12 landscapes

Ep 169: 12 finalists, 12 landscapes

With 29 finalists in total, I would have loved to talk with every single one, but time was short in the lead-up to the celebrations! Even so, these conversations give you a cross-section of artists and approaches to depicting the Australian landscape — from bold abstraction to meticulous realism. In this episode, you’ll hear from the following artists: Michaye Boulter, Belinda Street, Neil Haddon, Valerie Sparks (Honourable Mention), Peter Griffen, Harrison Bowe (People’s Choice winner), Melanie McCollin Walker, Denise Lamby (Residency Prize winner), Julz Beresford, Raymond Arnold, Richard Klecociuk and Melissa Kenihan. Links YouTube video highlights of this episode YouTube video of interview with winner Sophie Cape Podcast interview with winner Sophie Cape Talking with Painters Newsletter Talking with Painters on Instagram Talking with Painters on Facebook Maria Stoljar on LinkedIn Hadley’s Art Prize website Michaye Boulter Atmospheres, oil on linen 102 x 153 Neil Haddon ‘A view of water’ Acrylic oil and lacquer on aluminium 140 x 130 Valerie Sparks (Honourable Mention) ‘The Long View’ Pigment inkjet print on paper Peter Griffen ‘Small Rocks and Wild Grass’ Mixed media on canvas 91 x 122cm Belinda Street ‘Newcastle Harbour’ Oil on canvas 90 x 90cm Harrison Bowe (Winner People’s Choice Award) ‘Of Peaks and Tides’ Oil and enamel and beeswax on linen Melanie McCollin Walker ‘Quiet Refuge’ Acrylic on linen 156 x 156cm Denise Lamby (Winner Residency Prize) Memory of the Land Recycle tea bags canvas 90 x 90cm Julz Beresford ‘A Stillness at the Water’s Edge’ Oil on canvas 93 x 93 Raymond Arnold ‘The ‘blue,yellow’ Red Gum’ Digital print Richard Klecociuk ‘Ancient light’ Coloured pencil and ink 108 x 83cm Melissa Kenihan ‘Living Memory’ Oil on linen 55 x 155 cm
N/A•Oct 4, 2025
Ep 168 Sophie Cape wins the Hadley’s Art Prize

Ep 168 Sophie Cape wins the Hadley’s Art Prize

She also tells me about her incredible path to painting — from training as an elite athlete with Olympic ambitions to finding her way into the art world after injury changed the course of her life. Sophie has received multiple awards and residencies over her career. She has exhibited in over a dozen solo shows and her work is held in many public and private collections. She is represented by Olsen Gallery. A highlights video from this conversation will be up on my YouTube channel soon. I also spoke with 12 of the other finalists, and those conversations will be heading to YouTube shortly as well. During my time in Hobart, I was a guest of Hadley’s at the beautifully restored Hadley’s Orient Hotel (built in 1834) and is the venue for the exhibition. The show runs until 21 September, accompanied by a series of talks – you can find more information on their website here. Links Podcast listeners – see images of the works we talk about here Sophie Cape on Instagram Sophie Cape at Olsen Gallery Australian Story: Adrenaline Brush: Sophie Cape Sign up for the Talking with Painters newsletter Talking with Painters on Instagram Talking with Painters on youTube Talking with Painters on Facebook Thunder Shifts the Shivering Sands Rust, charcoal, soil, pigment and binder on canvas 2024 148cm x 160cm Romper Stomper, 2014, oil, acrylic, bitumen, charcoal, and soil on canvas, 209 x 203cm Winner, Portia Geach Memorial Award, 2014
31min•Sep 1, 2025
Ep 167 Remembering William Robinson with Davida Allen (2020)

Ep 167 Remembering William Robinson with Davida Allen (2020)

Australia has lost one of its great painters. William Robinson has passed away at the age of 89. I was lucky enough to meet Bill in 2020 when I interviewed his close friend, artist Davida Allen. At Davida’s suggestion, Bill joined the conversation —and what unfolded was something special. In this re-released episode you’ll hear Bill’s warmth, humour and generosity as the two artists reflect together in his Brisbane studio.
21min•Aug 27, 2025
Ep 166: Julie Fragar wins the 2025 Archibald Prize

Ep 166: Julie Fragar wins the 2025 Archibald Prize

Her large scale portrait of Justene, appearing to float in space and surrounded by model figures and structures drawn from Justene’s creative universe, commands the viewer’s attention. Julie talks with me about the portrait and its elements, her approach to colour and her tips for a productive sitting. This episode also includes Julie’s moving acceptance speech. Also announced today: Jude Rae, winner of the Wynne Prize (and two-time podcast guest) Gene A’Hern, winner of the Sulman Prize (video interview coming soon!) Scroll down for images of the winning works Podcast listeners click here to see images of the works Julie Fragar’s website Julie Fragar on Instagram Ep 28: Jude Rae Ep 97: Jude Rae ‘424-428’ My chat with Sulman winner Gene A’Hern TWP on Instagram TWP on Facebook Maria Stoljar on LinkedIn Sign up to the TWP monthly newsletter https://youtu.be/h4NfQDN803I Julie FragarFlagship Mother Multiverse (Justene) oil on canvas 240 x 180.4 cm Jude Rae Pre-dawn sky over Port Botany container terminal oil on linen 200 x 150.4 cm Gene A’Hern Sky painting oil and oil stick on board 240 x 240 cm
14min•May 9, 2025
Ep 165: Richard Lewer

Ep 165: Richard Lewer

From the deeply personal — like the final days of his father’s life — to the harrowing and socially charged, including the tragic death of an Indigenous child in custody and the haunting Snowtown murders, he takes it all on. But never with shock tactics. His work is quietly powerful — full of feeling, sensitivity, and a surprising touch of humour. And the surfaces he paints on? Anything but traditional — think steel, aluminium, formica table tops, even billiard tables. Richard is a multi-award-winning artist whose work has appeared in major public and private collections. He’s been a finalist multiple times in the Archibald and Sulman Prizes, and his recent acquisition by the National Gallery of Australia will soon be part of an upcoming exhibition and tour. This was the perfect time to sit down for a deep conversation — just ahead of his new show ‘The stories that persist are not always true’ opening on 10 April at Hugo Michell Gallery. Richard is also represented by Jan Murphy Gallery in Brisbane and Suite Gallery in New Zealand. Links Art work mentioned in this episode (for podcast listeners) Richard Lewer on Instagram Exhibition opening on 10 April at Hugo Michell Gallery YouTube video- Richard Lewer talks with Maria Stoljar about his commissioned work at the Art Gallery of NSW Boxing match Richard Lewer vs Luke Sinclair 2001, video, documentation of performance as art Worse luck I’m still here, 2014, video and animation Never Shall be Forgotten – A Mother’s Story, 2017, video and animation Talking with Painters on Instagram Join me on LinkedIn Sign up to the TWP newsletter https://youtu.be/4bei8rp-Tto?si=VJHHvFMwMcg6_2oU ‘We have grave concerns for your father’s health’ oil on epoxy-coated steel 80.5 x 141 cm Finalist Sulman prize 2019 I’m not the boy who cried wolf, 2025 80 x 120 cm acrylic on laminate tabletop Richard’s medical disasters acrylic on linen 181.5 x 152.7cm Finalist Sulman prize 2023 NGV Confessions (one wall of several) Acrylic on pegboard The serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals that God had made. He said to the woman ‘Did God really say that you must not eat from any tree in the garden?’. She replied ‘We may eat fruit from all the trees in the garden except for the…, 2022, acrylic on canvas, 153 x 153 cm ‘The 2006 Granny’ 2024 acrylic on linen 200.0 x 200.0 cm ‘The 2006 Granny’ 2024 acrylic on linen & 41.0 x 31.0 cm https://youtu.be/Du-Lad05_vk?si=lW4hXdAYI9jmNEfo Body of work ‘Steve’ acquired by the National Gallery of Australia
50min•Apr 7, 2025
Ep 164: New Videos, Loading Dock Invite & What’s Next

Ep 164: New Videos, Loading Dock Invite & What’s Next

Catch up on the latest YouTube videos and Instagram reels, and don’t miss the chance to be part of my next Loading Dock interview at the Art Gallery of NSW! Justin Williams (video) Justin Williams – ep 60 podcast interview Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt (video) Loading Dock Interviews Playlist Nic Plowman (Instagram reel) Sam Eyles (Instagram reel) The Art Room Sign up to the TWP newsletter Join me on LinkedIn
4min•Mar 18, 2025
Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt (live at the Tweed Regional Gallery)

Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt (live at the Tweed Regional Gallery)

The result of their residencies is A Dictionary for Painting, a stunning exhibition on display until March 2, 2025. In this episode, Robert and Keith share their creative highs and lows, offering an intimate glimpse into the making of their works. Special thanks to Tweed Regional Gallery for recording this event and sound engineer Dan Harcombe for his expertise. A video version of this interview will be online soon – and don’t miss my earlier interview with Robert from 2021, linked below. Links Podcast listeners click here to see images of the works Robert Malherbe Keith Burt Tweed Regional Gallery and Margaret Olley Art Centre Ep 162 – Ingrid Hedgcock Ep 161 – Sophie Perez and Sarah McDonald Ep 120 – Robert Malherbe Robert Malherbe on the YouTube channel John Honeywill Sarah MacDonald Instagram reel – what to take on a residency Sign up to my monthly Newsletter TWP Instagram TWP Facebook https://youtu.be/qbeENrJo6Nc?si=ZpIcNoNDKF7276_fMy LinkedIn https://youtu.be/qbeENrJo6Nc?si=ZpIcNoNDKF7276_f Selection of work by Robert Malherbe Selection of work by Keith Burt Robert Malherbe (b.1965) Olley’s table 09 2024 oil on linen 81 x 66 cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Keith Burt (b.1969) Bird 2024 oil on canvas 30 x 25cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Keith Burt (b.1969) Floral jug 2024 oil on canvas 40 x 40cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Robert Malherbe (b.1965) Olley’s table 06 2024 oil on linen 81 x 66 cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Margaret Olley (1923–2011) Still life with cornflowers 1995 oil on board 66.9 x 90.1 cm On loan from University Art Collection, Chau Chak Wing Museum, The University of Sydney Donated through The Hon R P Meagher bequest 2011 © Margaret Olley Art Trust Keith Burt Urban Artists Oil on canvas Winner 2020 Brisbane Portrait Prize 84 x 66cm Robert Malherbe The Stoic, 2011 oil on linen 76 x 61cm (Portrait of Nicholas Harding) Keith Burt (b.1969) Jar 2024 oil on canvas 40 x 40cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Keith Burt (b.1969) Vase 2024 oil on canvas 40 x 40cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist Robert Malherbe (b.1965) Olley’s table 12 2024 oil on polyester 51 x 41 cm Courtesy of the artist and Jan Murphy Gallery © The artist
55min•Dec 5, 2024
Ingrid Hedgcock at the Margaret Olley Art Centre

Ingrid Hedgcock at the Margaret Olley Art Centre

Ingrid Hedgcock, director of the Tweed Regional Gallery, shows me around the amazing Margaret Olley Art Centre which is the relocation of Margaret Olley’s home studio from Paddington in Sydney. Famous for being like an Aladdin’s cave of eclectic objects, the recreated home studio contains the sources of many inspirational items which appear in Margaret Olley’s paintings. Over an astonishing 21,000 items were relocated from Sydney to the gallery. Ingrid, having been involved in the project almost from its inception, is the ideal person to share insights into the creation of this extraordinary tribute to Olley. This is the second of three episodes recorded at Tweed Regional Gallery. The previous episode is my conversation with Sophie Perez and Sarah McDonald undertaking a residency at the gallery and the following episode will be my conversation with Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt at the gallery about the exhibition ‘A Dictionary for Painting’. Photo of Ingrid Hedgcock supplied by Tweed Regional Gallery Podcast listeners click here to see images of the Margaret Olley Art Centre Margaret Olley Art Centre ‘A Dictionary for Painting’, exhibition with Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt at the Tweed Regional Gallery until 2 March 2025 Scott Bevan on William Dobell Ben Quilty (ep 80) ‘The Hat Factory’, Margaret Olley Art Centre ‘The Yellow Room’, Margaret Olley Art Centre
N/A•Nov 19, 2024
Sophie Perez and Sarah McDonald (with edited version on YouTube)

Sophie Perez and Sarah McDonald (with edited version on YouTube)

That’s what I learned when I caught up with Sophie Perez and Sarah McDonald d uring my recent visit to the Tweed Regional Gallery. They were there for a residency in the Nancy Fairfax Artist in Residence studio. Both are accomplished landscape painters working in oils, have exhibited in solo and group shows across the country and both made the trek across Australia to immerse themselves in this experience – Sophie from Victoria and Sarah from South Australia. It was wonderful to hear their thoughts on the value of the residency and what has come from it. This is the first of three podcast episodes which I recorded on my visit to the Tweed Regional Gallery a couple of weeks ago. I was invited to facilitate a conversation in front of an audience with Robert Malherbe and Keith Burt, two leading painters who recently completed funded residencies at the gallery. Their new works, now hanging in the exhibition A Dictionary for Painting, are inspired by objects from Australian art royalty Margaret Olley’s glorious home studio, which has been relocated within the gallery. The gallery recorded the conversation and it will be coming soon to the podcast. I was also lucky enough to have an impromptu chat with gallery director Ingrid Hedgcock, an expert on Margaret Olley, who will be joining me on the next episode. Links Podcast listeners click here for website page and images of works Sign up to the Talking with Painters newsletter Sophie Perez website Sarah McDonald website Sophie Perez Instagram Sarah McDonald Instagram https://youtu.be/jxJybTWc81s?si=8neVQgRZyTP1x7y6 Wall of Sophie Perez’ work Wall of Sarah McDonald’s work Work mentioned by Sarah at about 9min 40s Work mentioned by Sophie at about 18min 30s Work mentioned by Sophie at about 21 min
23min•Nov 12, 2024
Karen Black

Karen Black

Podcast listeners click here to view the works Through layers of paint in varying translucency, Karen Black explores not only the physical nature of the female form but through her use of abstraction and considered use of colour she brings out another dimension – an emotional layer. There is a strong sense of a spontaneous response in her paintings so you may be surprised to hear that reading and research play as much a role in her process as creating those drips and brushstrokes. Karen talks with me in this episode about her fascination with recent research on frequencies and vibrations which occur in all matter. That interest informs her most recent body of work which will be on view in her upcoming solo show ‘alternative frequency’ at Ames Yavuz in Sydney. Karen has been acclaimed with awards and residencies and her work is in the collections of many public institutions. She has been repeatedly shortlisted in the Archibald and Sulman prizes, among many others, and has work hanging in both those prize exhibitions in the Art Gallery of NSW this year. She has also been recognised for her ceramic work, two of which have been acquired by the National Gallery of Victoria. In this podcast episode Karen talks with me about her childhood memories of art, how she came to painting, the story behind her current show and some interesting aspects of her process. Links Sign up to the TWP newsletter Karen Black on Instagram Karen Black at Ames Yavuz Karen Black at Sutton Gallery Solo show ‘alternative frequency’ at Ames Yavuz Gallery, 31 August to 5 October 2024 ‘Both of us’ oil on canvas 61 x 92 cm Finalist Sir John Sulman Prize 2024 Source: AGNSW website ‘Head wind’ 2024, oil on polyester, 183.3 x 153 cm Image courtesy of the artist ‘Licking the rain’ 2017 oil on canvas 152.5 x 122 cm Finalist Sir John Sulman Prize 2017 Source: AGNSW website ‘I Will Shade You from the World’ 2022 Oil on canvas 213.6 x 198.5cm Image courtesy of the artist Vivian Vidulich oil on polyester 183 x 152.5 cm Finalist – Archibald Prize 2024 Source: AGNSW website ‘Crown legs arms’ 2016 earthenware, 23ct gold leaf 69.0 × 29.7 × 29.2 cm Collection, National Gallery of Victoria
44min•Aug 21, 2024
Laura Jones wins the 2024 Archibald Prize

Laura Jones wins the 2024 Archibald Prize

When I interviewed Laura a few years ago it was after she had finished a residency on the Great Barrier Reef where she was studying the terrible bleaching events which occurred there (and continue to occur) and her concern surrounding those events is not unconnected with her winning portrait in this year’s Archibald Prize. Because it was after seeing Tim Winton’s documentary on the ABC, Ningaloo Nyinggulu, about the fight to save the Ningaloo reef that Laura requested an Archibald portrait sitting. They have in common a sense of urgency that we must act now on climate change and are doing everything they can to bring attention to the devastating and inevitable consequences of inaction. One of the most interesting parts of my conversation with Laura was when she explained how coral bleaching occurs. It’s complex and scientific but she explained it in a way that anyone could understand so I thought I would bring you that part of the interview today. The Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes exhibition continues until Sunday 8 September 2024. The Archibald finalist works then go on tour across 5 venues across NSW and for the first time, to the Northern Territory. The Wynne Prize finalist works will tour to four venues in regional NSW. 2018 podcast interview with Laura Jones (ep 53) Laura Jones’ Archibald Prize acceptance speech (Instagram) YouTube version of my Archibald interview with Laura Incognito Art Show Studio A Tim Winton Oil on linen, 198 x 152.5cm Image: Art Gallery of NSW, Jenni Carter Winner 2024 Archibald Prize
N/A•Jun 9, 2024
The Loading Dock Interviews (also on YouTube)

The Loading Dock Interviews (also on YouTube)

This is my 5th collection of Loading Dock Interviews of entrants to the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman prizes. Six brave painters fronted my camera and microphone as they delivered their work to the packing room at the Art Gallery of NSW via the loading dock. Thankyou to these artists (tap on their name for their Instagram page): Andrew Bischoff Mila Kalik Joshua Van Gestel Simon Weir Linda Lockyer Mary Shackman Tickets for the ‘Artists in Conversation’ talk with me and Marikit Santiago at the Art Gallery of NSW Sign up for the Talking with Painters Newsletter here. https://youtu.be/T-26mfmJMqw?si=L_YMco2XH8Hwwsup
N/A•May 19, 2024
Caroline Zilinsky

Caroline Zilinsky

Her paintings often depict a political or social narrative and although she accepts some are too confronting to hang above the sofa, there’s something about the levity in her use of line, colour and form which invites us to venture into the darker corners of our culture, causing us to linger and question. Caroline is also well known for her portraiture and landscape painting. She won the Portia Geach Memorial Award portraiture prize in 2020 (the same year she won the Evelyn Chapman award) and has been a finalist in many others including the Archibald and Darling portrait prizes. This interview took place at the mid-career survey show of Caroline’s work ‘Exquisite Cadaver’ at the University of Newcastle Gallery. Curated by Gillean Shaw, it was a collection of 40 stunning works spanning over 2 decades. The interview was also filmed and a 6 minute video of highlights can be seen here on the YouTube channel. Feature photo: Phillip Antonio Lemos Caroline Zilinsky on Instagram Caroline Zilinsky at Nanda\Hobbs Sign up to the TWP newsletter TWP YouTube channel Loading Dock interview My AGNSW Artists in Conversation interview with Caroline Ceal Floyer https://youtu.be/qW9UOk7RA7I?si=Sc30OmX9unO_Mitu ‘Kubla Khan’ 2022 oil on linen 107 x 106.7 cm ‘Exquisite Corpse’ 2024 Oil on linen ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ 2023 oil on linen 138 x 138cm ‘Faceless The Congressional Hearing of Mark Zuckerberg’ 2020 oil on linen 122 x 122cm ‘Man of Few Words’ 2020 Ink on AGNSW archive manila folder 30 x 21cm (paper size), 60 x 47cm (framed size) ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’ 2023 Oil on linen 112 x 122cm ‘Plastic Fantastic’, 2023 oil on linen 56 x 62cm ‘Refract Back’, 2023 Oil on linen 112 x122 cm ‘Too Long; Didn’t Read (Universal Declaration of Human Rights)’ 2023 Oil, Oil Stick and Digital Configuration on Canvas 97 x 87cm ‘Me and Ellie’, 2004-2005 oil on linen 71 x 454.5cm ‘My Brother Adrian’ oil on linen 72.5 x 54cm
N/A•Apr 21, 2024
The Story Behind the Painting (Part 2)

The Story Behind the Painting (Part 2)

Podcast listeners click here to see images of the work Over the years, podcast guests have shared some fascinating back stories to paintings they have made, stories which you could never have guessed just on viewing the work. Sometimes that back story has made me look at the work in a totally different way and I’m bringing you another eight artists’ works in addition to those in ep 155.
N/A•Apr 4, 2024
The story behind the painting: Fantauzzo, Flint, Quilty and Dobell

The story behind the painting: Fantauzzo, Flint, Quilty and Dobell

Podcast listeners click here to see images of the works Over the years, podcast guests have shared some fascinating back stories to paintings they have made, stories which you could never have guessed on merely viewing the work. Sometimes that back story has made me look at the work in a totally different way and I’m bringing you a few of those to you in this episode. Portrait of Heath Ledger) 10:40 ‘Baby’, 2015, oil on linen, 105 x 90.5cm (Finalist in Archibald Portrait Prize 2015) 15:45. ‘Kandahar’ 2011, oil on linen, 140 x 190cm Photo: Australian War Memorial 18:00 ‘Captain S. after Afghanistan’ 2012, oil on linen, 210 x 230cm Finalist Archibald Prize 2012 Photo: AGNSW/ Mim Stirling 20:30 ‘Margaret Olley’, 1948, oil on hardboard, 114.3 x 85.7 cm board Collection: Art Gallery of NSW Winner Archibald Prize 1948 23:45. ‘Storm Approaching, Wangi’, 1948, oil on cardboard on composition board, 32.9 x 56cm Winner Wynne Prize 1948
25min•Feb 19, 2024
Inspiration from the archives | The Flow State

Inspiration from the archives | The Flow State

Podcast guests talk with me about the flow state! See below for timestamps and links to each guest’s full podcast interview and video 3:39 Julie Nicholson and Fiona Verity – Podcast | Instagram video 6:40 Ann Thomson – Podcast | YouTube 7:54 Joshua Yeldham – Podcast | YouTube 10:15 Antonia Perricone Mrljak – Podcast | YouTube 11:25 Wendy Sharpe – Podcast | YouTube 12:51 Lewis Miller – Podcast | YouTube 13:50 Aida Tomescu – Podcast | YouTube 16:30 David Griggs – Podcast | YouTube 17:27 Idris Murphy – Podcast | YouTube 18:40 Kathrin Longhurst – Podcast | YouTube 20:50 Anthony White – Podcast | YouTube (coming soon) 22:07 Bernard Ollis – Podcast | YouTube 23:59 Kim Leutwyler – Podcast | YouTube 25:20 Tim Maguire – Podcast | YouTube 26:40 Belinda Street – Podcast | YouTube 27:58 Yvette Coppersmith – Podcast | YouTube (coming soon) 29:30 Tim Storrier – Podcast | YouTube 31:15 Jacqui Stockdale – Podcast | YouTube 32:02 Sandi Hester – YouTube Links Sandi Hester interview on the YouTube channel Sandi Hester’s YouTube channel ‘Bits of an Artist’s life’ Paul Newton YouTube video TWP Instagram reels – ‘Summer reels from the archives’ Ep ‘Inspiration from the archives: Colour (1)’ Ep ‘Inspiration from the archives: Colour (2)’ Ep ‘Inspiration from the archives: Risk’ Subscribe to the Talking with Painters monthly newsletter
34min•Jan 23, 2024
Jan Senbergs

Jan Senbergs

Above photo of Jan Senbergs by Riste Andrievski Click play for my podcast introduction to this interview and scroll down for the transcript. Podcast listeners click here and scroll down for transcript. A rare accomplishment. His art evolved from early masterly screenprints to large scale paintings and with subject matter as varied as urban and natural landscapes, industrial themes, surreal structures and forms and aerial map-like works. This episode has been a long time coming. Covid threw out our plans for an early 2020 meeting but two years later we met in Jan’s inspirational studio in Melbourne. His voice has been affected by some health issues and so this episode is coming to you by way of transcript (below) and an intro on the podcast. As I was setting up my audio equipment on the day of the interview, Jan and I chatted about the time he had spent in London in his 20s. We talked about other Australian artists who were there at that time. That’s where the recording of the interview began. Jan Senbergs I was the younger artist who came into that area and I didn’t know anybody. I didn’t want to bother the local Antipodeans (laughs) so I usually went out by myself. I headed for the National Gallery on one occasion and ran into Arthur Boyd heading there too. We travelled together on the bus from Pimlico to Trafalgar Square. It was very nice because we walked through the Gallery making comments. It’s lovely to do that with another painter. We walked past one room and Arthur stopped and said, ‘There’s a good painting in this room.’ It was a big dog watching over a dying nymph, by Piero di Cosimo. He was such an interesting painter. Afterwards, Arthur suggested we go and have a drink, so we went across the road and had a couple of beers and then he said ‘You’ll have to excuse me, but I’ve got to go back home. I’ve got a few duties there.’ We shook hands and I never saw him again. Maria Stoljar You never saw him again? JS No, but what was nice about it was the generosity of the older person to somebody younger who had just arrived. MS How lovely. But you knew a lot of famous Australian artists like Fred Williams, for example. He was a friend of yours, wasn’t he? JS Yeah, I knew Fred. When I first started showing around, I mixed with some of the older artists. At that time there were hardly any younger artists around. And because I hadn’t gone to an art school, I was very isolated. It’s quite different for artists today. Now there are thousands of young people trying very hard to make good art after their schooling. It’s a different atmosphere. Schools pump out all these people with hopes and ambitions. That’s the reason it’s good to know some of the older painters. MS Yes. Like John Brack? JS Yes, John Brack was one … Len Crawford, Fred, Roger Kemp – these were heavy-duty Melbourne blokes. MS It’s amazing that you, in your early 20s, were hanging out with those people. JS Yeah, it was actually. Because I couldn’t get into art school so I’d started working in a silkscreen printing company, which was a terrible bloody job (laughs). ‘Modern monument in colour ‘ 1975, Colour screenprint, 56.6 x 81.2cm (image) National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne MS Why? Was it heavy work or just dirty work? JS Dirty work. Screenprinting was very dirty. It was toxic and unventilated. As an apprentice you’ve got to scrub the screen and so on – you get all the shit jobs (laughs), but that’s understandable. On Friday nights, though, during the period of the six o’clock closing, I used to go into town. I didn’t want to go with the local trades blokes and drink with them, I’d go straight into Little Collins Street where all the real old lefties hung out – a fantastic atmosphere. They weren’t all painters by any means – there were writers, clapped-out academics and all sorts of people. MS Really bohemian. JS Yeah, but interesting to me. I went there and I just stood around. They didn’t pay any attention to me, but I was listening. It was an education. A political education as well. MS How amazing. So did you keep in contact with those people? JS Well, most of them I did, yeah. Including some writers. I was always interested in writing and writers. I used to read a lot when I was younger. The usual standard fare of James Joyce (both laugh). So I was mixing with all these people at six o’clock closing. There was a frantic atmosphere on a Friday night. There were all these characters coming in from work, and they wanted to have debates and bash out the things that they wanted to talk about. It was interesting. MS Yeah, and do you feel like that sort of political leaning comes through in your painting? Do you consciously think about that? JS No. I mean, it’s there. How can I put it? I don’t like to be a spruiker for any cause. Your paintings should do that. Usually what happens is that if people are too strident in their political views, they produce paintings which are very single-minded – with a message they want to send, but often the artworks are no good. There’s always been a debate about that, to see how far you can go. MS Actually what comes to mind are the ‘Altered Parliament House’ works. Those two works you painted when you were in Canberra. You were there during the dismissal of the Whitlam government in 1975. They’re powerful paintings which are silkscreen and oil. Can you tell me a bit about that time? ‘Altered Parliament House I’ (1976) Synthetic polymer paint and oil screenprint on canvas Collection: National Gallery of Victoria JS I was in Canberra at the ANU for a couple of years. What do they call it? Creative Arts Fellowship. They gave me a studio. Students were supposed to come and listen to your wise words but nobody turned up so it was a very easy job (laughs). And a very interesting period because at that time the Whitlam Government was introducing Medicare. I used to go to Parliament House and sit listening to Question Time. I’d wander up there out of curiosity, to see what they were talking about – to see how they were misbehaving (laughs). It was fascinating, it was lively. Then the day came when Gough was overthrown. The two paintings I did were of Parliament House (the Old Parliament House). They were sort of on a dark ground. It was nighttime. I was living in Campbell which crossed Anzac Parade and in the distance you could see this white ghost-like structure that was Parliament House. It gradually became a kind of symbol, or the anchor, for the paintings. They’re about as close as I’ve ever been to a political painting – I like to leave that sort of thing with a suggestion rather than hammering it down somebody’s throat. MS I think one is in the National Gallery of Victoria and the other is in the National Gallery in Canberra. With respect to number one, in the foreground there are ruins and so it’s like a metaphor for the destruction of the whole parliament in a way? JS Yeah, it did have those suggestions. Everybody was very keen on what was happening politically at the time and so you didn’t need to sort of push your point. Politically, I’ve been towards the left all the time, but at the same time I’m very critical and I’m becoming more critical as I get older! (laughs) MS What I find interesting about your work is the fact that you started off in silkscreen printing and even though you let that go by about 1980 or so, you started incorporating that into your painting. JS That’s true, yeah. MS That sounds like a quite laborious thing to do. JS It was a shocking thing. I hated it by the end of it. (laughs) MS (laughs) Did you? Why? JS Oh, it was so laborious to get things right, setting up the registration over large areas. It was very hard work. It wasn’t like when you’re painting or doing a drawing. When I came back from Canberra, I was doing screen prints and I felt at that stage that I was getting a bit too sophisticated with the prints – too much of a smartarse (laughs) – so I gave it away. ‘The flyer’ 1975 Synthetic polymer paint, oil screenprint on canvas, 167 x 244cm Collection of Paul Guest, Melbourne MS I think by that time you were being called ‘the greatest silkscreen printer in Australia’. Maybe that was when you felt like you had had enough? JS Well, I don’t know about that. But what I wanted to do was to make a mark again, go completely the other way. So I began to draw. And I started to draw around Port Melbourne, especially old Port Melbourne. I gradually changed. Port panorama, 1980, lithograph, printed in black ink on white BFK Rives Moulin du Gué paper 45.4 x 63.4 cm image; 57.0 x 76.0 cm sheet Collection: Art Gallery of NSW MS So that was quite an industrial sort of landscape? JS Yes. And that was also around the time that I met my second wife Helen Beresford. MS Yeah. JS All of these things – it was a very exciting time. MS It must have been a really big change in your life. JS It sure was, yeah. MS And it was around that time that you got that huge commission to create a work for the High Court of Australia. I think you were involved from the very beginning when they were designing that building. Just to give a bit of background – the High Court of Australia is a great example of brutalist architecture. We’re talking about huge concrete walls, big open spaces, and the area that you had to create a work for was quite a large area. JS In the atrium, yeah. MS So how did you go about that? JS They had a shortlist of about four or five when they gave me the job. I think they probably gave it to me because I’d realised it was too huge an area for canvas – it would sag within a couple of years – so I’d thought of some other material. I started through theYellow Pages to look for materials. I didn’t get very far! I spotted ‘aluminium’. That was it! (laughs) Aluminium was light and it was permanent, you had to anodise it, it wouldn’t corrode. Constitutional Wall Mural and States Wall Mural 1977 – 80 Collection of the High Court of Australia MS Had you ever used it before? JS No MS So this was a totally new technique that you were going to try? JS That’s right. I had a friend, Ian Claremont, who knew about anodising. It was all a bit unexpected. I told the story of the Constitution of the High Court, the States and the Supreme Court with images etched into the aluminium. MS So the brief was basically to depict imagery about the Commonwealth and the six states. Is that right? JS They didn’t mention the six states but that became part of it. I introduced that. When I first got the job, I knew nothing about the High Court and I wondered ‘What the hell am I going to do? What sort of design?’ MS (both laugh) Well, I think before the building was built, the High Court was sitting in Melbourne and Sydney. There was no building in Canberra? JS That’s right. The High Court had rooms in every state – small rooms, chambers. In order to find out more about what the function of the court was, I was lucky enough to meet Ninian Stephen, who used to be the Governor-General and a High Court Judge. I asked him if I could come and see him to explain what the functions of the High Court were. MS (both laugh) Well, I mean, when you think about it, the layman wouldn’t know what the High Court did. JS Ninian Stephen was so tolerant and kind to me. He carefully explained how the High Court worked. Then I had to design it. The logistics alone were a challenge. I was worried the whole thing would slide off the wall – so I designed these boxes and I screen printed images on them. There was the Constitutional wall and the States wall, shooting all the way up to the top. MS And how did you come up with the imagery? What were you looking at? JS Well, by that time I was looking at various symbols of Australian institutions. In the case of what I call the States wall, I had all sorts of symbols from each state. For example, Queensland had a tropical industry, sugar cane, which told a story. The larger Constitutional wall was to do with things from the time of Federation when Australia became a state in its own way – a changeover from the British way – so there are a lot of images there. And they liked it (laughs). I found an anodising factory in Melbourne. When it finished for the day, Ian and I would go there through the night and etch the big aluminium sheets in huge acid baths before the factory began its morning shift. MS It’s fantastic and it’s still there, obviously. And I think the Queen came when they opened the High Court, and didn’t you have an exchange with her? JS I did, actually. When we finished the job and the time came to open it, we were all lined up and the Queen and Prince Philip came along, with the Chief Justice Garfield Barwick introducing us. When the Queen got to me she looked up at my piece and she said, ‘My, that’s big.’ I said, ‘Yes, Ma’am’. The Duke was about four paces behind, and he came up and said, ‘Do you do this kind of thing often?’ and I said ‘Whenever I can’ (laughs). So that was my meeting with the Queen and the Duke. MS (laughs) That is a pretty amazing story. So let’s talk about other works of yours that I’ve found interesting. And one of them was when you went to Antarctica. What was that trip like? JS It was marvellous, wonderful. It was back in 1987. We went down with the Australian Antarctic Division’s resupply ship MV Icebird. It sailed out to Heard Island and delivered food and supplies to the Davis and Mawson stations. That was the main intention of the trip. It was marvellous too on all sorts of levels. The Antarctic landscape is fantastic and it’s been photographed a million times, but my angle was a bit different. I was fascinated with life down there and how we are squatting on another continent with our suburban values. My paintings were more about the bases than the icebergs. MS And you had two major paintings, ‘Mawson’ and ‘Davis’, depicting those bases down there where you gave us that aerial perspective that you’re very well known for – those map-like paintings. These aren’t the same as your more urban pictures but it’s that sort of feel, of an aerial perspective. And with all that ice in the background, these are very dramatic paintings. ‘Davis’ 1987 Synthetic polymer paint on canvas 213 x 289cm, private collection ‘Mawson’ 1987 Synthetic polymer paint on canvas 213 x 289cm, private collection JS Yes, the ‘Mawson’ painting is like that. You’ve got this settlement right on the edge with a huge dome of Antarctica behind it. I exaggerated it. There was a kind of map-like painting of a base as well as a huge amount of rubbish lying about. Part of the job was to pick up some of the rubbish and go and put it back on the ship and take it to a quarry in Tasmania. MS Oh ok, I didn’t realise that. That’s interesting because that idea of detritus and waste, that’s something that often appears in your work. Is that something that attracts you – those forms? JS I start off with images that I want to use. Then I apply some of them to paintings. It’s a combination of thinking. It’s hard to explain. It’s a kind of storytelling, only in a less obvious way. Firstly, I paint a quality of imagery, before I start telling the story–you know, that’s important. With Davis and Mawson, I wanted details of various things that I wanted to add to the composition – a bit like early Chinese landscapes that are taken from various levels – unlike the Western view on a fixed level. So you have various points of viewing all crisscrossing that make up the composition which you in turn take to the next step to make it interesting. MS Yeah. Would you start with a sketch to determine the composition? JS Yes. But also I had notebooks. I’d do sketches there. They were mostly sketches from memory. Plein air ones as well of course. MS And when you’re working on a big painting, do you ever decide halfway through ‘this isn’t working, I’ve got to change it’. Does that happen often, or have you really predetermined it before you start? JS You mean the composition? MS Yes. JS Sometimes. Sometimes you fail and you start from scratch again. But not often. For me, a lot of these canvases are like maps. I’d worked out the scale, the relationships. There’s a lot of fiddling around with map-like imagery early on. ‘Melbourne capriccio 3’ (2009) Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 195.2 x 184cm Collection: National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne MS I’d like to jump back now – so in 1966 you were awarded the Helena Rubinstein Travelling Art Scholarship and you went to Europe. You stayed in London for a while and then when you came back in the late 1960s, things had changed in the art world hadn’t they? JS They sure had, yeah. MS Can you tell me a bit about that? I think all the rage was colour field painting, hard edge abstraction … JS That’s right. When I came back there was this new type of thing here and so I wanted to show some of the smart tricks I learnt in London (laughs) MS (laughs) So, you found that you changed direction a little bit over that period? JS Yeah, I realised that my previous paintings were too clogged up, too rich sometimes, and also crude. I didn’t mind the crudeness but it was time to leave that. I’d grown up a bit (laughs). I made some steel sculptures, a kind of gesture at outdoor art, minimal art. MS They were quite geometric, weren’t they? JS Yes, standing on legs. They were about 20 feet tall. I made them in my backyard. I left the final processes to the fabricator but I made the design, a kind of slot to hold this image of a head, but the problem was the image was too top heavy (laughs). MS So they didn’t stay up? JS They stayed up for a couple of years, in St Andrews, in the hills north of Melbourne. I found some land to put this stuff on and met Cliff Pugh, who lived up there. He said I should contact Frank Dalby Davison. Dalby Davison was a very controversial and interesting writer in the ’30s, being ahead of the game and writing about people’s relationships. He agreed to put them up on his land, and I said I’d try not to make a mess (both laugh). I made five of these sculptures and dug a ditch and put them in concrete and left them there. You could see them from the road down below the hill and people were wondering what the hell they were. MS They looked sort of alien? JS Yeah, some people thought they were guideposts for planes coming in. People came up with all sorts of explanations for them. MS Isn’t that the definition of great art? To get people to wonder and to use their imagination. JS Exactly, yeah, that’s right. They stood up there for a while and then one day there was a huge storm and they blew over. Also, the cows didn’t help. Frank Dalby Davison had a lot of cows and they were leaning against the sculptures, causing them to topple, and I thought that was very unfair for Frank (both laugh). MS That’s a shame, but at least you’ve got images of them. JS Yes. I went back and saw Frank and said, ‘You’ve been very generous’. MS I bet he missed them because they would have been like a real statement on his property. JS Well, it could have been that. I suppose I was one of the first people doing that sort of thing in Australia. The Americans did that sort of land art– Robert Smithson and a couple of others, but in different ways. I had always wanted to do something outside of painting. MS And 3D obviously as well. But you didn’t continue to do a lot more of that sort of sculptural work? JS No, I stuck with the brushes. MS I want to take you back to when you first got to Australia. You had a rough time during the war years. What was it like when you got here? JS We left Latvia, ending up in the British sector after the war, in a DP (Displaced Persons) camp. We stayed there for about four or five years. And finally, we got boats to Australia. Nobody knew anything about Australia. For example, my grandmother who was with us carried a ham that she’d cured because she thought that in Australia there’d be no food (laughs). When she got off the ship the Customs officers took the ham. She was so upset – ‘They’ve taken away my food!’ (laughs). We were hauled off to Bonegilla, the migrant camp near Albury-Wodonga. It was an old army camp. All the adults were moaning and groaning but us kids loved it. I’d just turned 10 so I was very happy. It was like we were released from some dark place to this wonderful sky and golden grass, to muck around and enjoy all of it. MS So it was a very optimistic experience coming to Australia for you. You couldn’t speak English at that point? JS No. We lived there for about four months – my sister, mother, grandmother and I. The camp had people from all sorts of countries. We went to a one-teacher primary school for young farming kids – there were only about eight students. I often wonder how the local kids must have felt – their lovely little school invaded by hundreds of little wogs! (laughs) MS (laughs) What experience did you have with art at that point? How did you become interested in art? JS I was always drawing as a child. I went to trade school in Melbourne, at Richmond Tech – but I wasn’t at all interested in trades. I started to do little sketches in my exercise book. One day Len French the painter came to the school as a rookie teacher. He was a terrible teacher (laughs), but he used to liven the place up. One day he brought in three postcards: One was of saints, by El Greco, one was Cezanne’s ‘Mont Sainte-Victoire’, and the third was ‘The Sleeping Gypsy’ by Henri Rousseau. Len said, ‘Which one do you like?’. I liked Rousseau’s Sleeping Gypsy. And that triggered something in me because I began to realise that there was this other big world out there. MS He must have been a very exciting person to come into your life. JS He was, yeah. MS Was he an established painter at that point? JS No, he wasn’t. He was becoming established – he ran with the local scene. A couple of years before that he’d been overseas, he’d done a bit of travel, so he was sort of sophisticated. MS And he became a mentor for you for many years? JS He was in a way. He introduced me to the pubs (both laugh). MS Is that how you got to meet John Brack and Fred Williams and the other artists in Melbourne? JS The way I met John Brack was different. I had a studio in Hardware Lane – one of the lanes of Melbourne. It was an awful place, very dark and dingy, and I was doing these black, ugly pictures that nobody could possibly want (laughs). One day in walked John Brack with a bloke called Hal Hattam. He was a doctor who hung around with the artists and was a bit of a collector as well. Brack was very austere and firm, and I was like a rat scurrying around. They didn’t say much, just looked around and then left. But about two weeks later I was asked to drop a painting off at John Brack’s house – he’d bought one of my paintings. I was so touched. MS Wow. JS Because coming from him it was so special. MS Yes, and that’s before you actually got to know him? JS Yeah, he liked my stuff. MS He was a lot older than you, like 20 years older? JS He was, yeah. He came out of the army without firing a shot and then he became a teacher in Melbourne and got a job at the Gallery School at the NGV. He ended up teaching at Melbourne Grammar – all the little rich boys. (laughs) MS Well, they have to be taught too (both laugh). JS John Brack was a big influence on me because he was the conscience of our generation. Later, we shared the same dealer, Rudy Komon, who was my dealer in Sydney. George Baldessin was also with Rudy. As was Fred Williams. A bit of a boys’ club. MS Well, I suppose in those days there were fewer women artists. But that must have been a pretty amazing thing for you because Rudy Komon was one of the most influential art dealers in Australia at the time. He got you on his books when you were in your mid 20s I think? JS Yes, I was. MS That’s amazing. JS He was planning to give me a first show. But I’d gone and made a mess of myself – I sort of spoiled it all – I smashed myself up in a car accident. Went through the windscreen and almost lost an eye. Rudy came into the hospital and saw me and as he walked out, he said to someone, ‘Well it’s a pity about Jan, he could have been a good artist’ (laughs), and I said ‘Don’t say that!’ MS I can imagine you didn’t want to hear that at that time. That didn’t happen in the end, thankfully! JS Years later when Rudy and I travelled around the place I sometimes raised that: I said, ‘Rudy, you almost wrote me off – you told me I was no good!’ He said ‘Oh, I wouldn’t do that to you.’ MS So, you were with him for 20 years or so? JS Close to it yeah. He was quite different from the other dealers. He gave money to various painters from his stable. MS Like a wage sort of thing? JS Yeah, to keep them going. Rudy also had Jon Molvig from Queensland. Molvig would ring up Rudy and say, ‘Rudy I need some dough- not just some dough – the full symphony’. He was very keen on Molvig. MS And Rudy had a lot in common with you, didn’t he? Because he was also a migrant. JS He was, yeah. Though he never talked much about his past. MS He was a lot older than you. JS Oh, yeah. He was an interesting character. The first time I showed with him was in the ’70s. I was in a drawing show. When I came in from Melbourne to the gallery and saw red stickers everywhere. I said, ‘Rudy, Jesus! You mean all these people bought my drawings?’ and he said, ‘Oh yes, Jan, there are a few people who like you.’ But who they were he wouldn’t say. Years later, after he died, I was at Rudy’s gallery with Gwen Frolich. She was Rudy’s rock. She’d pulled him out of problems time after time – tax problems and all the other stuff – and she and I were looking through Rudy’s storeroom. We were digging through all this stuff when I came across one of my drawings. Then I found more of them, all from that first drawing show. And I said to Gwen, ‘What’s the story?’ Gwen just smiled and drew on a cigarette. She said, ‘Rudy thought you needed some money at the time.’ Rudy had bought up my drawings! MS And he did it that way so that it bolstered your confidence as well. JS Yeah, he was a good bloke. But he was full of bullshit as well (both laugh). MS Well, anyone in the art world has to be a bit like that don’t they? JS Yeah. I once travelled with him to South America, to the Sao Paulo Biennial, in which I was representing Australia. We went on this trip with James Gleeson. MS The famous surrealist painter. JS Yes, that’s right. Gleeson’s partner, Frank O’Keefe, wanted to go as well so it ended up being the four of us on a plane to Brazil, via Tahiti. Rudy wanted to go as our representative, but he really just wanted to be there for the trip. MS So for that 1973 Sao Paulo Biennial I understand you did 18 large paintings over two years. Those works were very typical of what you were doing at the time, those bleak industrial landscapes, very large works? Fort 2 (1973), 152 x 183cm synthetic polymer paint, oil screenprint on canvas Collection: National Gallery of Australia, Canberra JS Yes, that’s right. MS And I think Fred Williams called you an ‘industrial surrealist’. JS (laughs) Yeah. MS Those structures and forms that are in those paintings – for example, ‘Fort 2’ – they do have quite a surreal quality to them. They don’t exist in the world. How did you come to paint those images? JS I was just starting to use silkscreen techniques in a painting, which straight away made everything much sharper. Even though you might have very dark colours, blacks and browns, there’s movement within those colours. People picked up on an industrial theme. People have sort of pigeonholed me as an industrial landscape artist. I’m not just that, I’m a lot of other things at the same time. But they like to label you – it’s always the case. MS Yeah. For example, those Antarctic paintings are totally different. Actually, those works where you were painting near your holiday home around the Otway Ranges in south-western Victoria, they’re also really beautiful works, and very expressive paintings. ‘Otway night’ 1994 Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 198 x 259cm Collection: Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney JS I’m glad you like them. MS And you know what I noticed about those and also the map paintings, those aerial paintings – they have much more colour. Did you find that you were using more colour later in your career? JS Yeah, I think so. I was slowly moving away from what I call my ‘axle grease’ period. MS (laughs) Which I liked as well. JS But you’re right. The colour change is there in the Otway paintings. It’s not over the top, but it’s there. I suppose as you get older you don’t have to hammer everything every time. You learn how to just step back, to retain your point. When you’re younger you’re fierce and attacking. As you get older it doesn’t matter so much. I’m finding that with me these days. I’ve had a very good run when I come to think of it – all the things that I’ve had the opportunity to do. It’s been marvellous. I’ve had the chance to do my own imagery, and I have always wanted to be outside the main movement. Maybe close to the movement sometimes, but not part of it. MS Why do you think that is? JS Must be my twisted nature (laughs). MS Yeah, well, I’m going to be a psychoanalyst now. Is it partly due to coming to Australia when you were 10, and not going to art school, not doing the traditional thing that somebody who was born here might have done? JS Yeah, sure. You become very aware of that of course, but you still want to follow your own path. I never wanted to copy anybody’s work. You always try for some kind of originality, even if it isn’t possible. That’s what I’ve always thought. MS Your subject matter is really interesting, and the ways in which you find inspiration, for want of a better word. For example, in the Otways works, the William Buckley theme came through; the outsider, the escaped convict who lived among the Indigenous locals. It must be pretty exciting when you come across a theme or subject that really draws you? JS Yes, it is. Sometimes it takes a long while to realise that but you’re right – it’s very much about retaining your ‘handwriting’ — I always tried to do that. ‘Buckley’s Cave’ 1996 Collection: Geelong Gallery MS Well, I suppose you can’t paint any other way. You’ll always end up painting like yourself. JS That’s right. When I did a series of paintings, whether they were from Antarctica, or Mount Lowell in Tasmania, or some of the other places, I always had a father figure. For Mount Lyell I had Robert Sticht, who was chief metallurgist in Queenstown in the late 1890s. He was a very eccentric character. A mining boss, but also quite sophisticated. He was a man of some culture. He had a Rembrandt print and a priceless private library. I’ve always been attracted to characters like that. There were two people from the Antarctic. One was Carsten Borchgrevink. He was a schoolteacher in country New South Wales at the turn of the century. But he was also a bloke who wanted to go down to the Antarctic. He ended up getting on a whaling boat as a sailor, bound for Antarctica. At this point no one had set foot on Antarctica – a lot of people had come close. When Borchgrevink who was rowing a boat with an advance party realised he was coming close to the land, he jumped out and said, ‘I’m the first human being to put foot on Antarctica’. His captain pulled him back straight away, but Borchgrevink was a hero. He was a difficult man, very awkward, but he had this madness about him which I found very attractive. Borchgrevink’s foot (1987) Synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 197 x 156cm After that first trip, he gathered a team together and went down to the Cape Adare area. They stayed there for a year, so he was among the first to stay for an extended time as well. He was a real outsider. I’ve always loved mavericks like that. Despite Borchgrevink’s success, the British ignored him completely because he wasn’t part of the Establishment, not part of the Royal Scientific Society and all that, he was just a loose cannon. But before that he beat Scott to the South Pole. He also stayed with Amundsen. In retirement Borchgrevink was finally given some sort of recognition, the British Royal Society medal – bugger all, really! I got a sense of what inspired Borchgrevink when I went to Antarctica myself. A couple of helicopters used to drop us off right in the middle somewhere, in the most remote expanse. And you sat there in the evening with a glass of whisky in your hand, thinking, ‘I’m really away from the world’, that sort of feeling. MS Amazing. I imagine the stars were really bright. JS That’s right – and also the southern lights, Aurora Australis. At 10 o’clock one night on the Icebird we were all down in the hold drinking and I went on the deck just to get away from all that – and I saw this massive white yellow streak going right across the sky, like a big question mark. The others came out and we stood around in awe. MS You know one of the paintings I liked from Antarctica was the one where your fellow artist Bea Maddock is being lifted onto the boat. She’d broken her leg and you painted her being winched aboard? JS Yes, poor Bea. She’d barely made it to shore when she slipped. For the rest of the trip she could only sketch from the boat. MS That would have been pretty rough being on a boat for weeks not being able to move around. JS Yeah, she was very stoic. The isolation was tough even without an injury like that. This was back in the days with the old radio systems – no phones, so to make contact with your family or anyone else you had to book in and you could talk for 10 minutes on the bridge and that was it. ‘Bea Maddock being lifted onto the Icebird- Heard Island’ 1987 Collection: State Art Collection, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth MS So you would have really felt cut off from the rest of the world just on this solitary ship. And back home, as far as your regular routine goes, have you always worked five days a week or does that vary? JS Probably five days a week. On Saturdays I could be found sort of floating around the house, or maybe having a punt on the horses or watching a bit of footy. I’m very ordinary! (laughs) MS (laughs) I don’t know if ‘ordinary’ is the right word, Jan. When I look around this studio and see how much work you’ve done over the years the thing that strikes me is that you have created so many huge works over your life. You didn’t muck around. You had an idea and you executed it. JS Yeah, that’s generally true. MS I suppose using acrylics is quite good for that? JS Yes, acrylics are good for large-scale painting. When I was doing some smaller work I’d use oil. But what I found was that I’d use acrylics so close to oil that people don’t know. MS Let’s talk about work you’ve done more recently. When I was supposed to first see you two years ago, before COVID intervened, your show with Niagara Galleries was on, called ‘Not Quite the Last Picture Show’. You had a self-portrait in that and I thought, wow, I hadn’t seen a lot of self-portraits by you. Although, speaking to your wife Helen, she said that you actually do self-portraits from time to time. JS In secret (laughs). MS Well, I thought that one in the show was great. It was called ‘Floating’ and it was basically a head disembodied – there was no neck even. JS That’s right. That was the intention. MS Can you tell me about that? JS It was because I wanted some sort of figurative element for the show. I was hoping to do a bigger one but then when I did it I thought, ‘That’s enough.’ I’ve done other self-portrait drawings and so on, but portrait painting is another thing, a special thing. ‘Floating’ 2019 Acrylic on paper, 68.5 x 51cm MS Do you like it? JS I like it, yeah. There are some good portrait painters – people like Rick Amor, fantastic painter. There are quite a few in Melbourne. MS Yeah, Rick Amor is amazing. JS But the thing is with the art scene there’s a lot of intellect – the new way of making art. You get all these sort of sharply designed things, bold colours and everything else, but at the same time I think they have a limited life. The photographic image is good, but I think painting is better, though it depends what the painting depicts. Every week when you read the reviews – not that there’s many reviews anymore – you see the fascination with a method, a technique, and not enough of what it’s actually saying. I always thought that anything is valid providing you’re not overcome by the wonderment of technique. I still believe you can be very avant garde just being a painter. Just painting. It’s your life in a way. It’s done by hand. MS Totally. It’s becoming more and more valuable and valued because we are bombarded by so many digital images and photographic images that this idea of putting paint on a surface, it’s becoming more rare. JS That’s right. When you’re growing up you’re learning all about art, modern art and so on, it’s all part of it, but at the same time you’re always looking for some odd character that’s coming up. MS You’ve held lots of very important positions over the years. We talked about your position at ANU. You were also appointed visiting chair in Australian studies at Harvard University, which was I think the first time an artist was appointed to that position. And you were a trustee of the National Gallery Victoria. You’ve been bestowed the highest award at RMIT, the Doctor of Arts, and you’re one of the leading artists in Australia. Yet you’re so modest, Jan. How have you been able to keep your feet on the ground over all these years? JS Well, I don’t know about modest. The thing is you do these things – and I’ve never asked for this to happen – people just gave them to you. Harvard, for instance, there was never an artist in that position, it was always high-class academics. I’d never been to university and here I was going to the top university in the world! (laughs) MS (laughs) What was that experience like? JS Marvellous, but tough. The students at those universities are very, very eager and I found myself doing quite a lot of talks on Australian art. When I went there I thought, ‘What the hell have I got to do here?’ and then Harvard said, ‘Jan, could you arrange an Australian art show?’ So I started asking around about borrowing all sorts of art. It was all going to take so long. Then when it all looked impossible we got the Holmes a Court collection, a very distinguished collection of Aboriginal art from various parts of Australia. And that was part of my mission – to show Australian art. MS You were saying to me before that you’re probably not going to return to painting at this stage. Have you decided definitely? JS Well, it’s rather hard for me, having this ailment, it’s harder to set up. MS Are you still drawing? JS Yeah, I’m doing some drawing. But you see I’m at the end of things – this is my studio, this is the place I built over the years. I mean, (my wife) Helen and my daughter Jes are doing a great job cataloguing my stuff, but it’s not a working studio anymore. MS It’s a pretty special space. I’ve seen a lot of studios over the years since I’ve started this podcast. And I’ve got to say this one is probably in the top three, if not number one – it’s just wonderful. JS Yeah, it’s a special workplace. MS Well Jan, I’d like to thank you for your time today and for sharing your story and your extraordinary work in this amazing space. Thank you so much. JS Thank You. Melbourne August, 2022 https://youtu.be/XhGHEkABcjc?si=yaDOc7AgrCAe7sRA
6min•Dec 2, 2023
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