词条 | Clarice Beckett |
释义 |
| name = Clarice Beckett | image = Photo of Clarice Marjoribanks Beckett.jpg | imagesize = | caption = | birth_name = Clarice Majoribanks Beckett | birth_date = {{birth date|1887|3|21|df=y}} | birth_place = Casterton, Australia | death_date = {{death date and age|1935|7|7|1887|3|21|df=y}} | death_place = Melbourne, Australia | nationality = Australian | education = National Gallery School | field = Painting | training = | movement = Australian Tonalism | works = | patrons = | awards = | spouse = }} Clarice Majoribanks Beckett (21 March 1887 – 7 July 1935) was an Australian tonalist painter whose works are featured in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria and the Art Gallery of South Australia. Early lifeBeckett was born in Casterton, Victoria, the daughter of Joseph Clifden Beckett (c1852-1936), a bank manager,[1] and his wife Elizabeth Kate, née Brown (c1855-1934). Her grandfather was John Brown, a Scottish master builder who had designed and built Como House and its gardens in South Yarra, Victoria. Clarice was a boarder at Queen's College, Ballarat until 1903, before spending a year at Melbourne Church of England Girls' Grammar School. She showed artistic ability, and after leaving school took private lessons in charcoal drawing at Ballarat. In 1914 she went to Melbourne's National Gallery School, completing three years of study under Frederick McCubbin before continuing her studies under Max Meldrum, whose controversial theories became a pivotal factor in her own art practice. In 1919 her parents moved from Bendigo to the Melbourne bayside suburb of Beaumaris and, with their health failing, Beckett assumed household responsibilities that virtually dictated the structure of the rest of her life, severely limiting her artistic endeavour. Beckett could only go out during the dawn and dusk to paint as most of her day was spent caring for them.[2] WorkBeckett is recognised as one of Australia's most important modernist artists. Despite a talent for portraiture and a keen public appreciation for her still lifes, Beckett preferred the solo, outdoor process of painting landscapes. She relentlessly painted sea and beachscapes, rural and suburban scenes, often enveloped in the atmospheric effects of early mornings or evening. Her subjects were often drawn from the Beaumaris area, where she lived for the latter part of her life. She was one of the first of her group to use a painting trolley, or mobile easel to make it easier to paint outdoors in different locations.[3] Beckett's mentor, Max Meldrum, said, "There would never be a great woman artist...Woman had not the capacity to be alone", but he must have modified this view when Beckett became his best pupil.[4] Formal qualitiesA critic from The Age, 2 September 1924, wrote— One would imagine from the little scenes that Miss Beckett has gathered, in the name of Australian art, that Australia was in a continual state of fog – all kinds of fogs – pink, blue, green and grey with an occasional mist that surely was never on land or sea. Miss Beckett is probably feeling her way through the fogs and no doubt she will […] at least rise above the dreariness which characterizes her paintings at present. Australian TonalismAustralian Tonalism is characterised by a particular "misty" or atmospheric quality created by the Meldrum painting method of building "tone on tone". Tonalism developed from Meldrum's "Scientific theory of Impressions"; claiming that social decadence had given artists an exaggerated interest in colour and, to their detriment, were paying less attention to tone and proportion. Art, he said, should be a pure science based on optical analysis; its sole purpose being to place on the canvas the first ordered tonal impressions that the eye received. All adornments and narrative and literary references should be rejected.{{citation needed|date=May 2014}} Tonalism opposed Post-Impressionism and Modernism, and is now regarded as a precursor to Minimalism and Conceptualism. The whole movement had been under fierce controversy and they were without doubt the most unpopular group of artists, in the eyes of most other artists, in the history of Australian art. Influential Melbourne artist and teacher George Bell described Australian Tonalism as a "cult which muffles everything in a pall of opaque density".[5] DeathWhile painting the wild sea off Beaumaris during a big storm in 1935, Beckett developed pneumonia and died four days later in a hospital at Sandringham[6] She was buried in the Cheltenham Memorial Park (Wangara Road) not far from another noted female artist, May Vale. She was only 48 when she died, the year after her mother's death. ExhibitionsSolo exhibitions
Group exhibitions
Selected posthumous exhibitions
The lan Potter Museum of Art, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria: 5 February 1999 – 28 March 1999 SH Ervin Gallery (National Trust of Australia NSW), Sydney, NSW: 24 April 1999 – 13 June 1999 Orange Regional Gallery, Orange, NSW: 19 June 1999 – 18 July 1999 Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide SA: 6 August 1999 – 19 September 1999 Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo, Victoria: 30 September 1999 – 31 October 1999 Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat, Victoria: 5 November 1999 – 16 January 2000 Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, Tasmania: 3 February 2000 – 26 March 2000 Burnie Regional Art Gallery, Burnie, Tasmania: 7 April 2000 – 22 May 2000 Represented in public collections
References1. ^"Joseph Clifden BECKETT was the manager of the Colonial Bank at Casterton 1875-1903". Casterton Historical Society http://www.swvic.org/casterton/beckett_joseph.htm accessed 5 Nov 2014 2. ^Rosalind Hollinrake, 'Beckett, Clarice Marjoribanks (1887–1935)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/beckett-clarice-marjoribanks-5178/text8701, published in hardcopy 1979, accessed online 5 November 2014. 3. ^Catalogue: "Misty Moderns – Australian Tonalists 1915–1950", written by curator Tracey Lock-Weir, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide 2008 4. ^{{cite book|author1=Clarice Beckett|author2=Rosalind Hollinrake|author3=Ian Potter Museum of Art|title=Clarice Beckett: politically incorrect|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_iBIAQAAIAAJ|year=1999|publisher=Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne}} 5. ^Hollinrake, Rosalind (3 April 1985). "Painting against the tide". The Age. 6. ^"Beckett art joins Misty Moderns in Langwarrin" by Teresa Murphy, Hastings Leader, 12 November 2009 Selected bibliography
External links{{Commons category}}
7 : 1887 births|1935 deaths|People from Casterton, Victoria|Australian women painters|Artists from Melbourne|20th-century Australian painters|20th-century women artists |
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