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Elizabeth Durack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elizabeth Durack
Durack in 1961
Born(1915-07-06)6 July 1915
Perth, Western Australia
Died25 May 2000(2000-05-25) (aged 84)
Perth, Western Australia
Known forPainting
Elizabeth Durack with Broome Madonna, from the series Time and Tide at the Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 1946

Elizabeth Durack Clancy CMG, OBE (6 July 1915 – 25 May 2000) was a Western Australian artist and writer.

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  • Margaret Kilgallen: Heroines | ART21 "Exclusive"
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  • Lucy Durack's Magical New Role | Studio 10

Transcription

Barry, do you think we should do something on here? I think I might want to do a tag back over there. BARRY MCGEE: Okay. [BOTH LAUGHING] KILGALLEN: We're nervous. [LAUGHS] Ok, you guys can look at something else for a while. [LAUGHS] Give her a stick. KILGALLEN: You want me to go up there? MCGEE: Okay. KILGALLEN: There are random women who write on trains, but there's one-offs that I might see. But, there's a woman who writes 'Judi Wynn' and I think I know where she works. There's a woman who writes 'Batwoman' and I think she's from Oregon somewhere. Yeah, there's not that many women who do it, at all. It's definitely mostly men. MCGEE: Do you want to go look at the trains? [SOUND OF A TRAIN APPROACHING] KILGALLEN: Oh shit, Barry, we should be... They're going to see us then, no? MCGEE: It's alright. KILGALLEN: Alright, let's go walk out then. MCGEE: Let's wave to them. KILGALLEN: Oh, because these trucks aren't even running. [SOUND OF TRAIN HORN] KILGALLEN: I do have a lot of heroines, As well as a lot of heroes too, but... I like to paint images of women who I find inspiring, And I don't like to choose people that everybody knows. I like to choose people that just do small things, and yet somehow hit me in my heart. [SOUND OF A VIOLIN, ACOUSTIC GUITAR, AND BANJO GETTING READY TO PLAY] I got interested in "old-time" music, particularly the banjo, and In the beginning I would hear somebody playing music on a record, And then I wouldn't know what they look like at all but I would imagine what they look like, and draw it. [SOUND OF BANJO STRUMMING] The records I would buy would have no women on them, ever. And Matokie Slaughter, for instance, She was the first woman I ever saw on a record, on an old-time record. You know, I couldn't believe I had found a woman on there, and I didn't know it was a woman for a while, Because the name 'Matokie', I didn't know what gender that was. [SOUND OF BANJO STRUMMING CONTINUES] Algia Mae Hinton, she plays kind of bluesy guitar. [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR PLAYING A BLUES RIFF WITH FEET TAPPING ON A STAGE] I saw her on a tape all about flat-footing and buck dancing. She would do the flat-footing, and then she would turn around and put her guitar on her back, And play the guitar, and dance, and it was pretty incredible. [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR PLAYING A BLUES RIFF WITH FEET TAPPING ON A STAGE CONTINUES] She's a single mother and supports her children by playing her music. [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR AND FEMALE VOCALIST SINGING 'LOS CORONES'] Or, I used to read a lot about the history of swimming, and... The first woman to win the Olympics in 1912 was a woman named Fanny Durack. And she was from Australia, and she wore a full wool suit. And the reason she won is because she swam the Australian crawl And the other women weren't swimming that way. [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR AND FEMALE VOCALIST CONTINUES] When I get down and don't feel like doing art, and I feel like giving it up, Then the thing that keeps me going is the fact that Maybe somebody will learn from what I'm doing. When you put your work out there and somebody comes up to you and thanks you for doing it, And especially when young people come up and thank me, that is why I do work. And I especially hope, you know, to inspire young women. Because I often feel like so much emphasis is put on how beautiful you are, and how thin you are, and not a lot of emphasis is put on what you can do and how smart you are. I'd like to change the emphasis of what's important when looking at a woman

Early life

Born in the Perth suburb of Claremont on 6 July 1915, she was a daughter of Kimberley pioneer, Michael Patrick Durack (1865–1950)[1] and his wife, Bessie Johnstone Durack. She was the younger sister of writer and historian Dame Mary Durack (1913–1994).[1] The sisters were educated at the Loreto Convent in Perth, and also on the Kimberley cattle stations, Argyle Downs and Ivanhoe. It was there that they established unique and enduring relationships with the Mirriuwong-Gajerrong people of the Ord River region. In 1936–37 the sisters travelled to Europe where Elizabeth studied at the Chelsea Polytechnic, London.

At work on The New Plumage, Black Swan mural, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Nedlands, Perth, 1956

Art

Her work was notable for the way it combined and reflected both western and aboriginal perceptions of the world. Based for much of her life in remote parts of north and central Western Australia, far from the metropolitan centres of mainstream artistic activity, Durack received stimulus and inspiration from sources quite different from those of her contemporaries, e.g. William Dobell, Arthur Boyd, Albert Tucker, et al. Separated by both geography and gender, her talent emerged "... original, versatile and persistent, a xerophytic adaptation, almost, to a particularly harsh environment".[2]

August 1946 saw her first exhibition in Perth. In 1951 she had a joint exhibition with the potter Eileen Constance Keys. They put their work together in still-life arrangements inspired by Georges Braque.[3] July 2000 was the last exhibition she planned. It was held posthumously in London, Elizabeth Durack held 65 solo exhibitions and participated in many group shows. Over that time her art evolved from simple line drawings, through part-abstract metaphorical works, to the transcendent masterworks of her last creative phase.[4][5]

Durack's work included a number of dyeline prints, hand coloured in watercolour, depicting life on a Kimberley cattle station (Ivanhoe and Lissadell pastoral stations). Aboriginal women and children feature in these pictures, four of which can be seen at the National Museum of Australia.[6]

In the beginning . . . (Genesis 1) 1997, mixed media on linen, diptych, each 190x92

Illustrations

Some of Elizabeth Durack's earliest published illustrations are of aboriginal life in Western Australia, for example her illustrations for the 1935 book "All-About: The Story of a Black Community on Argyle Station, Kimberley".[7][5] "Elizabeth Durack is credited with illustrating the book Who rides the river? by JK Ewers, released in 1956.[8] Illustrations were provided by Durack for a new edition of Australian Legendary Tales in 1953, Aboriginal tales edited and selected by Henrietta Drake-Brockman from those collected and translated by K. Langloh Parker. This edition was chosen by the Children's Book Council of Australia as "Book of the Year" for 1954.[9]

She and her sister also made a comic strip, Nungalla and Jungalla in 1942-1943.[10]

Honours and awards

In recognition of services to art and literature, Elizabeth Durack was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1966 and in 1982, a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG). In 1994 and 1996 Murdoch University and the University of Western Australia conferred upon her Honorary Doctorates of Letters.

Eddie Burrup controversy

In the 1990s, artworks by indigenous artist "Eddie Burrup" began to appear on the Aboriginal art scene. Paintings by 'Eddie Burrup' were first displayed in January 1995 in a mixed exhibition at Kimberley Fine Art—Durack Gallery, Broome, Western Australia. The gallery was run by Elizabeth's daughter, Perpetua Durack Clancy.[11] In January 1996 Eddie Burrup was invited to participate in Native Titled Now, a 1996 Adelaide Festival of Arts Event presented by the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, March–April 1996. Later in the year works by Eddie Burrup were selected for the Telstra 13th National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award at the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, 17 August–19 October 1996. In 1997 Elizabeth Durack disclosed that Burrup was her pseudonym, an identity she considered her "alter ego". Controversy ensued, in part because her works had been included in Indigenous Australian art exhibitions.[12][13]

Durack freely assumed the right to make Aboriginal art as Burrup.[14] This was not appreciated by other Aboriginal artists nor the gallery owner who represented "Burrup". Durack continued to make art as Eddie Burrup until her death on 25 May 2000, aged 84. Responses from the art world and the public ranged widely. Some censured Elizabeth Durack and dismissed Burrup paintings that previously had been acclaimed.[15] Three works by Eddie Burrup from Native Titled Now were removed from the walls of the Gippsland Art Gallery in Sale, Victoria.[16] Members of the Aboriginal art community claimed that Durack had stolen indigenous culture and John Mundine, an Aboriginal art curator, remarked that "it's the last thing left that you could possibly take away other than our lives or shoot us all." Doreen Mellor, who had curated the Native Titled Now exhibition, stated that "as an Aboriginal person I feel really offended."[17] Durack was bemused by the controversy, remarking "I'm just using a nom de plume. Why are people so interested in the fact of what I've done?"[14]

Legacy

The estate of Elizabeth Durack contains original material from the 1920s on through all decades up until the year 2000. The material consists principally of artworks, manuscripts, poetry and letters. During her lifetime Durack held many successful exhibitions but resisted selling certain key works that remain with the estate.[5]

Since her death, executors have arranged exhibitions as follows:

  • The Art of Eddie Burrup presented by the Rebecca Hossack Gallery, London in July 2000;
  • Prelude — Early works by Elizabeth Durack 1947–50, a Travelling Exhibition, presented by Art on the Move, the National Exhibitions Touring Structure for Western Australia, in 2002–3
  • an auction presented by McKenzies Auctioneers, Perth, May 2006;
  • a sale of miscellaneous printed and original material, presented by Robert Muir Old and Rare Books, Perth, July 2006;
  • paintings from the series, Battle Cries (1978) and Bett-Bett's wonderful lonely palace ... (1985) presented by Greenhill Galleries, Perth, May 2007
  • With outstretched arms ... Kimberley Sisters of St John of God with children, patients and friends in postwar Broome, Derby and Beagle Bay presented by Forty7ED at the Lingiari Foundation Centre, Broome Western Australia, July 2007.[18]

Durack was interviewed and featured on numerous radio and TV shows including 60 Minutes.

In 2016, a volume of selected writings reflecting her art and life was published, edited by Perpetua Durack Clancy.[19][5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Bolton, G. C. "Durack, Michael Patrick (1865–1950)". Cultural Advice. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  2. ^ Hutchings, Patrick: "The Art of Elizabeth Durack", The Western Mail, Perth, 1981, page 9
  3. ^ Erickson, Dorothy, "Eileen Constance Keys (1903–1992)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 17 December 2023
  4. ^ Douglas, Elena (16 March 2015). "Elizabeth Durack, an overlooked Australian artist and author". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d Paull, John (2017). The Incarnation of Eddie Burrup: A Review of Elizabeth Durack, Art & Life, Selected Writings, Perpetua Durack Clancy (Editor), Brisbane: Connor Court. Arts, 6(7), 1-8.
  6. ^ Durack dyeline prints, National Museum of Australia
  7. ^ Durack, Mary & Elizabeth (1935). All-About: The Story of a Black Community on Argyle Station, Kimberley. Perth: Imperial Printing Company.
  8. ^ J.K.Ewers. Who Rides On the River? Angus & Robertson. First school edition 1964
  9. ^ "S.A. Woman's Book Of The Year". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 11 August 1954. p. 16. Retrieved 22 October 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Elizabeth Durack". lambiek.net.
  11. ^ Brenda Niall, True North: The Story of Mary and Elizabeth Durack, Text Publishing, Melbourne, Australia, 2012. p. 237.
  12. ^ Alan McCulloch, Susan McCulloch, Emily McCulloch Childs, The New McCulloch's Encyclopedia of Australian Art, Aus Art Editions in association with The Miegunyah Press, Melbourne, 2006, p.49.
  13. ^ Frank Campbell. "Giving the Past a Future: Internet Archives Revive Australian Art" (PDF). Australian Art Sales Digest published by John Furphy Pty. Ltd., Melbourne, Australia, 26 September 2009.
  14. ^ a b "Australian Biography: Elizabeth Durack". Australian Biography: National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.
  15. ^ Susan McCulloch. "Blacks blast Durack over art of illusion" (PDF). The Weekend Australian, 8–9 March 1997, pp.1&10.
  16. ^ Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV News archives, 8 March 1997.
  17. ^ Maynard, Roger (8 March 1997). "Aboriginal male artist unveiled as white woman". The Times, London.
  18. ^ "ABC News". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  19. ^ "Elizabeth Durack: Art & Life Selected Writings - $29.95 : Connor Court Publishing, Australian Publisher". Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2016.

External links

This page was last edited on 23 June 2024, at 01:56
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