Art collector Thomas Murrell will host a personally GUIDED TOURS OF
HIS PRIVATE ART COLLECTION AND HISTORIC HOUSE, FAIRVIEW OF
SUBIACO.ABOUT THE TOURS
There will be another guided tours of the house and collection. Each
tour will last two hours. The tour times is 11 am. The owner of the
collection, Thomas Murrell will personally guide each tour. A
professionally produced and published catalogue will also be available
for sale. Click on the select a time link to book your tour, purchase
a copy of the catalogue or buy a book.
ABOUT THE FAIRVIEW ART COLLECTION
The focus of the collection is South Australian and West Australian
women artists from the 1850s to the present day, which are housed in a
110-year-old heritage home in Subiaco.
Notable artists in the collection include Marie Tuck (1866-1947),
Jessamine Buxton (1895-1966), Mary M. Wigg (1904-2001), Nancy Sayer
(1909-2005), Mavis Lightly (1911-1988), Yvonne Jean Grant (1923-2017),
Dr Joan Janet Bayliss (1925-2003), Priscilla Blight (1926-1990), Joy
Tomcala, Genevieve Berry, Aurelie Yeo, May Courtney O’Neill,
Christine Davis, Deborah Zibah and Lene Makwana.
The collection is eclectic and multi-generational. Until recently,
there was no unifying theme or cohesive pattern and structure to the
collecting – and it is all the more interesting as a result.
The overall picture, therefore, is one of esotericism but also one of
national and local connection. The artists featured identified
strongly with their home and the art on show in the Fairview
collection demonstrates this. Such intrinsic attachment to place
reflects the great attachment the owner has to the historic house and
to investigating the history of the great building.
Primarily consisting of paintings, the collection is an interesting
snapshot of the state of South and Western Australian painting
throughout the twentieth century. A body of ceramic work also
supplements the collection.
Many of the artists within the collection were operating in the
twentieth century and bear the marks of clear influence of some the
major movements within art history on their practice. The works
demonstrate familiarity with French modernism and impressionism,
particularly with regards to painting en plein air and painting scenes
of daily life. Many Australian artists relocated to Europe, primarily
Paris, for the purposes of studying in the capital of Modern Art –
Marie Tuck, to name just one.
Many of the women artists have remained largely hidden because from
the 1920s to the 1990s, it was frowned upon to be more famous than
your husband.
The Fairview Art Collection defines a great injustice and dichotomy: a
man promotes his profession to the world via the outside design
features of a prominently positioned house, while inside the talents
and efforts of invisible women line the walls.
ABOUT THE HOUSE
Historic Fairview of Subiaco was built in the Queen Anne Federation
style for Scottish Ice Engineer John Kennedy and his wife Christina in
1915 and is classified by the National Trust as a place of cultural
significance because of the unique ornate front veranda.
Designed by Kennedy when he was at the peak of his career running the
Perth Ice Works, snowflake timber corner brackets represent his
profession as an ice engineer. Flying angels, often found on the front
of Scottish sailing ships in the 1880s to protect passengers during
their dangerous voyages to Australia, were incorporated by Kennedy to
watch over his family.
Kennedy arrived in Australia in the mid-1880s with nothing and he
designed Fairview in the pre-refrigeration age at the peak of his
career to tell the world he had achieved middle-class respectability.
His architectural design brilliance is reflected in the unique
snowflake design of the front veranda square corner timber brackets,
delicate leadlight windows by noted glass artist Arthur Clarke from
the Barnett Brothers studio in East Perth and ornate hand glazed tiles
from T & R Boote from Staffordshire.
ABOUT THE OWNER AND TOUR GUIDE - THOMAS MURRELL
Thomas Murrell is a multi-award-winning broadcaster, international
business speaker, author, company director and art collector.
He has been a full-time professional writer, broadcaster and public
speaker for more than 35 years and spent 12 years at the ABC as a
rural reporter, _Country Hour_ presenter, Executive Producer and
Senior Media Executive running both Regional Radio and ABC Perth.
He has written or co-written more than 13 books, and his latest
bestseller_ Insider Secrets of International Speaking_ (McGraw-Hill
International) is considered the bible on speaking internationally.
He is a former director of ASX-listed Walkabout Resources, a current
advisory Board member of private gas company Botsgas and Chairman of
Singapore-based Hong Boa Media.
He is a graduate of three Australian Universities, gaining an MBA in
marketing from the University of Western Australia and is a former
National Junior Hammer Throw Champion.
He hosts a regular business podcast _Media Motivators_ and an art
podcast _Hidden Talent_.
This unique combination of leadership, communication expertise, and
business experience linked with a passion for art makes him an
in-demand corporate speaker and event host.
BIOGRAPHIES OF WEST AUSTRALIAN WOMEN ARTISTS IN THE COLLECTION
These are just a sample of the amazing and talented West Australian
women artists in the collection.
NANCY SAYER (1909-2005) won the first Albany Art Exhibition Award in
1963 and repeated her success 23 years later. Her distrust of
self-promotion was highlighted in 1997 when she refused to attend her
first solo exhibition at the Kensington Gallery in Adelaide. The
headline in The Advertiser newspaper read: “No-show Nancy has better
things to do” and went on to explain she preferred to take her dog
to obedience school than hang out with the arty throng. Her highly
resolute, stubborn, honest, authentic yet self-confident personality
comes out in her still-life oil paintings.
MAVIS LIGHTLY (1911-1988) was born in Collie and is notable for having
been an inaugural foundation member of the Busselton Society of Arts.
She won the $500 Tom Wardle Prize for oils at the 1968 Busselton Art
Society Competition, reputed by Society Patron, Sir Claude Hotchin to
be the richest art prize offered outside of Perth. Her entry is part
of The Busselton Art Society collection, the largest private art
collection in the South West of Western Australia. As a local farmer
on limited acreage and income, her artwork paid for her children to
attend elite boarding schools in Perth.
YVONNE JEAN GRANT (1923-2017) was from a middle-class Victorian family
who took up painting early in life but domestic duties got in the way
of a successful career. She changed her name from Grubb to Grant and
the way she signed her name with the “t” forming a large cross as
the last letter, suggests a spiritual woman who was interested in
portraying a positive public image. Her still life oil paintings
created in her Safety Bay studio are refined, elegant and bursting
with colour.
DR JOAN JANET BAYLISS (1925-2003) worked in Kalgoorlie and Bunbury as
an artist, author, teacher and Clinical psychologist. In 1937 she had
to flee Rabaul, New Britain when a dramatic volcanic eruption forced
her family’s evacuation on a steamship. She incorporated art when
working with children facing behavioural and emotional challenges. Her
most famous work is a quartet of ink and watercolour Lady McCusker
roses reproduced as a set of gift cards.
PRISCILLA BLIGHT (1926-1990) was born in Quairading and raced against
seven-time Olympic medallist Shirley Strickland. The softness in her
oil paintings is unique: a trait passed down from her father, Sergeant
Bill Brown. The gentle, yet impressionable way he dealt with trainees
at the Northam Army Camp was legendary. She was awarded the most
popular painting in the City of Fremantle Art Exhibition of 1982 for
an oil portrait of an indigenous railway worker from the wheatbelt.
MAY COURTNEY O’NEILL (1931) grew up in Old Trafford playing in the
bomb craters of WWII, left school at 14 years old, married in 1952 and
then emigrated to Australia in 1963. Her artistic journey started in
1973 after being badly injured in a car accident that left her
bedridden for eight weeks. She established the first art group in
Carnarvon and has won many awards for her watercolours.
JOY TOMCALA (1932) was born in Kalgoorlie, married a Czech refugee,
milked 100 shorthorn cows twice a day at Ambergate and at age 54 took
up painting, becoming an influential member of the Busselton Arts
Society. She is known for her colourful botanical work, especially
poppies inspired by visits to her husband’s European homeland. She
was mentored by Faith Hemsley.
GENEVIEVE BERRY (1937) won First Prize in the Trigg Art Club
watercolour exhibition award in 1993 and numerous others in the
Wanneroo Arts Society. She also exhibited in the “Nine to Five”
exhibition held by the Contemporary Art Society of WA at Atwell House
in April 1983 and “The Reunion Exhibition – Art of Perth Technical
College: A Decade at St Brigid’s Annexe 1978 – 1988”.
CAROLE GEORGINA AYRES (1944) was literally born during a bomb blast in
the United Kingdom when a buzz bomb hit a hospital wall and her mother
was blown out of bed. She has participated in nearly 250 joint
exhibitions and 19 solo exhibitions since 1979 and much of her
inspiration is drawn from travels along the Canning Stock Route.
CHRISTINE DAVIS (1961) was born in Merredin, undertook her first
studies at Fukuoka, Japan in 1978 as a Rotary Exchange student and
began teaching art at Narrogin Senior High School in 1986. Since 1988
she has had many solo and group exhibitions and won numerous awards.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Visit the FAIRVIEW website [http://www.fairviewofsubiaco.com.au].
Listen to the podcast here [https://tinyurl.com/hiddentalentpodcast].
Watch a video here [https://youtu.be/3SvGPVqPUIw].
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29/04/2021 Last update