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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Prints & printmaking
This ground-breaking book follows the rise of a distinctive school
of Australian art that first emerged in the 1940s. Beginning with
the artists of the 'Angry Penguins' movement, Arthur Boyd, Albert
Tucker, Joy Hester and Sidney Nolan, whose work exhibited a new
strain of surrealism and expressionism, the book continues with the
rich variety of 1970s work by Jan Seberg, Robert Jacks and George
Baldessin, moving through to contemporary artists such as Rover
Thomas and Judy Watson. Stephen Coppel traces the major
developments in Australian art from the 1940s to the present day,
and examines the significant interplay with the British art scene.
The book includes a substantial essay outlining the major
developments in Australian art since the 1940s, the reception of
Australian art in Britain and the recent rise of Aboriginal
printmaking. It features 127 works by 61 artists, and includes
concise artists' biographies and individual commentaries on the
works.
Denton Welch (1915-48) died at the age of thirty-three after a
brief but brilliant career as a writer and painter. The revealing,
poignant, impressionistic voice that buoys his novels was much
praised by critics and literati in England and has since inspired
creative artists from William S. Burroughs to John Waters. His
achievements were all the more remarkable because he suffered from
debilitating spinal and pelvic injuries incurred in a bicycle
accident at age eighteen. Though German bombs were ravaging
Britain, Welch wrote in his published work about the idyllic
landscapes and local people he observed in Kent. There, in 1943, he
met and fell in love with Eric Oliver, a handsome, intelligent, but
rather insecure "landboy"--an agricultural worker with the wartime
Land Army. Oliver would become a companion, comrade, lover, and
caretaker during the last six years of Welch's life. All fifty-one
letters that Welch wrote to Oliver are collected and annotated here
for the first time. They offer a historical record of life amidst
the hardship, deprivation, and fear of World War II, and also are a
timeless testament of one young man's tender and intimate emotions,
his immense courage in adversity, and his continual struggle for
love and creative existence.
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