John Peart (1945 - 2013) : A Selection from the Estate

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JOHN PEART A selection from the estate

8 - 25 July 2015


Watters Gallery

109 Riley Street, East Sydney NSW 2010 Ph: (02) 9331 2556  Fax: (02) 9361 6871 www.wattersgallery.com  info@wattersgallery.com Hours: Tues and Sat: 10am - 5pm; Wed Thurs Fri 10am - 7pm

No 1.  Tiru Blue 2011  oil on board  183 x 92cm Front and back cover, No 16.  Reverie  1985  oil on canvas  170.5 x 122.5cm (detail)


JOHN  PEART

A selection from the estate 8 – 25 July 2015 John Peart’s last solo exhibition of paintings was in September 2013 at

this gallery.

It was a successful exhibition; what one recalls most strongly was an impression that an understanding of the depth of John Peart as an artist was underway. This was reflected in Peart himself; he gave the impression that he had strayed into some enchanted land awaiting his exploration. For anyone close to Peart it was evident that much of his quiet euphoria flowed from the completion, three months earlier, of his new studio. That’s where much of the exhibition was painted and already the walls were covered with paintings at different stages of completion, some suggesting unguessable new directions. The studio, the realisation of a decades-long dream is huge. In the case of many (most?) artists it would seem ostentatious, vastly self-indulgent, but, somehow set against the immensity of Peart’s vision and achievement it seemed quite appropriate. “When painting big I breathe a different air”, he once said and after only three months in his new studio an oxygen-rich exhilaration was evident.

So, the first exhibition of works painted or completed in the new studio opened on 11th September 2013.

The exhibition closed on 28 September. Three days later John Peart was found dead in the bush close to his studio. So much seemed to have died. When, in his early twenties, Peart left Australia for New York and the UK he had already made a name for himself. Then, mainly in letters from England, we can follow a thoughtfulness and a struggle with his thinking.

He looked at a lot of art and met up with many artists whose work he admired; he steeped himself in philosophical ideas. At first he believed that his ultimate aim should be to become a member of the avant garde – a goal to which one’s work progressed. But gradually the idea of ‘progress’ within art faded as his concern became solely, in his words, to create ‘moving and beautiful visual things‘. With this agenda of course his work changed, we might say developed, but in a way unplanned and innate. All his work, past and present, seemed to have an equal standing in his mind as if it were all current and recent, that is, in the present. This meant that to paint over a work was not a destruction of the past but an alteration and addition to the present. He seemed to have shared with TS Eliot in ‘Burnt Norton’ the notion that:

Time past and time future

What might have been and what has been Point to one end, which is always present

So, here we are, July 2015, less than two years later, presenting a body of work selected from the John Peart Estate by his five children: Gara , Simon, Mirabai, Jyoti and Janaki. Geoffrey Legge – Watters Gallery

Exhibition dates Opens 6-8pm Wednesday 8 July 2015 Closes 5pm Saturday 25 July 2015


‘Wedderburn Ochre’ is one of a series of paintings John started in 1982 with Wedderburn in the title. It was the early 80’s when dad moved to Wedderburn with his young family. He was the last of the 5 original artists to join the ‘Widden Weddin’ group. His dear friend, the late Roy Jackson introduced him to artists and neighbours Elisabeth Cummings, Fred Braat and the late Joan Brassil. Back in the day we cleared land, dug earth, and hauled rocks. Houses and studios were built, children raised, paintings painted surrounded by family, friends, artists and the pristine bush, deep gorges and sacred water holes, once home to the Tharawal people. It was an energetic, hopeful, creative period for John and he was relishing the space. Although the 1970’s were productive years, gone were the disused poultry sheds and damp cowsheds that he used to paint in back in the UK. It was the first time in over 5 years that he had a big studio to work in. It was here he painted ‘Nandi Moon’, one of many large, magnificent paintings. You were always welcome for a cuppa and/or a curry (dad made very tasty curries) and if there was time (or even if there wasn’t), a tour of the studio and a chat about what he was working on. This is a special place, a permanent place, our family home and now his final resting place down past the new studio, along the path under the koala tree. Years earlier on a bushwalk with dad, he pointed up through the trees and said ‘if you focus on the space between the branches you see the shapes in a different way’. He was right. I saw things a little differently after that. John’s legacy is his unique visual language he shared with us on a bushwalk or articulated so profoundly and poetically through his work. Having always visited in the past, I recently spent a year living at Wedderburn. During this time, I got to know the bush, and the seasons, the birdcalls and night noises and myself better. I appreciate how Wedderburn light, color, form, shadow and line can be found everywhere in John’s work as I look for the spaces between the shapes. GARA PEART

Image opposite:  No 2.  Wedderburn Ochre  1989  oil on board  93 x 62cm



I am hypnotised by the beauty and untamed nature of Dad’s work, the ability he had to reveal the unexpected…elements that usually pervade the eye are exposed and naked, celebrated and announced. Dad had a way of seeing the world quite beautifully, like everything was essentially uncomplicated. You are that. The world just is. Or isn’t. Depending on how you decide to look at it… and his paintings are just that- gifted to the viewer as elegant puzzles; making you question what you are really seeing and experiencing and consider how all the elements were born to fit together. Each work has such a distinctive personality that draws you into its own world…like stepping into other dimensions, fluid and in flux; where pigments sing and dance, lively and unapologetic, galoofing with playful wit. The longer I look at Dad’s works, the more I lose myself in the world of them… as in meditation, something in me is suddenly stilled and at peace… I emerge feeling invigorated, inspired to live, to love, to create. To just Be. Gloaming II “Gloaming, or twilight, the time after sunset and before dark” – I remember being a special time of day… as after squeezing every last ray of usable natural sunlight to paint, Dad would finally put down his brush and retire for the day. Often this was the only time of day he would happily be social; be fully present with other people and relax… (until the rising of tomorrow’s sun.) JYOTI PEART

Image opposite:  No 3.  Gloaming II  1974-1991  acrylic on canvas  169.5 x 103cm



Zibar hung in the house while I lived with Dad as a teenager in 2003-2006. He had included in the design of the roof a reflective angle to direct natural light onto the sandy cement rendered wall on which the painting hung. It overlooked the dining, lounge and kitchen area all strewn with newspapers, art materials and mugs. For about four months Zibar hung at the centre of his living space. When I think of this time, my most notable memory of his lifestyle is that all aspects of his daily routine would be accompanied by the news. He bought newspapers daily but he would never throw any away so each room of the house would usually have a large, permanent stack of newspaper. The radio would be on when he wasn’t absorbed in painting and often also when he was. When the sun went down, the tumbling structure of Zibar would be lit by the evening news on TV and the fire he had started with old newspaper. When he hung a painting on that wall, I saw it as a gesture of pride but he would never openly admire the works he hung. It was as if he were testing to see how well a painting can embody a space or become a character of a time. It is true for me now that when looking at Zibar I remember Dad’s newspapers and his unbroken focus on the large-scale aspects of the outer as well as inner world. JANAKI PEART

Image opposite:  No 4.  Zibar  2003  oil and acrylic on canvas  170 x 240cm



Panel Painting I Split second glimpse a revelation

of never-before-seen play jostling life wonder

wonderful full

bursting dance

upon the screen of the infinite. This is truly seeing,

Thank you for giving me fresh eyes now, You wash my thoughts clear. The last time I saw Dad, at the final exhibition he had at Watters Gallery, I’d just had these feelings described. I’ll always be glad that I thanked him right then. Dad taught me to see. Through his works he still teaches me, challenges me, wakes me up. ‘Panel Painting I’, of the palette painting series, is a work that does just this. At first I didn’t understand this work. Now it’s a visual puzzle to contemplate, a puzzle whose pieces are constantly moving. In my childhood on walks through nature, Dad would beckon me to look, perhaps at the brilliant vermillion burst of new growth there against dancing lines of scarred bush, or the pattern of rust in a rock. I could see the joy these moments gave him. A mixture of amusement, wonder and non-attachment. Recognition. An instant of true connection with a visual moment within the true spontaneity, unpredictability and exuberance of nature. I have a feeling this was one of Dad’s favourite ways to interact with the world. Though he loved to share these insights, in general these musings must have been pure and private. I’m sure this was a primary motivation behind his works. I get the sense he was at once a student, a devotee, and master of visual surprise. Some of his works jump and jostle about eternally. Other works may let our eyes settle into their pattern, but always there is further to see, deeper to look. MIRABAI PEART Image opposite:

No 5.  Panel Painting 1  2009  oil on board panels  130 x 120cm



No 6.  No 3  1987  oil on canvas  122 x 290cm



This piece, No 3, (illustrated next page) was one of several similar works that were stored at Wedderburn. Some were removed from their stretchers and rolled up, some badly weathered. I had the impression that they were not considered particularly precious to Dad, that they had been part of the outpouring of work from a previous era and had only escaped the reworking/over-painting that so many of his earlier painting were subject to by hiding somewhere in a dark corner of the studio. It is the pared down exploration of linear rhythm and pictorial space that I feel a connection with. Although he tended not to talk explicitly about the visual influences in his work I feel that there were some very strong visual elements around John in the 80s and early 90s that may have snuck into his paintings. It was during the 80s that he first moved to Wedderburn and we began building the family home. Clearing of the building site created rectangles of light sandy ground. Into this a series of trenches were cut in shallow relief then grids of formwork were laid into the trenches and floated above the surface. Pouring the concrete slab concealed all that at the same time providing a pristine new ground. Then Cyprus pine stud walls rose and through their intersecting planes the sinuous organic weaving of trees and bush becomes the visual ground for the next layer of texture, a matrix of steel rods and fine mesh. Finally blobs and smears of render begin to fill up the entire foreground until only glimpses of substructure remained. ‘Surrender to the render’ was our mantra. SIMON PEART

Image opposite:  No 7.  Untitled  2005  oil on board panels  120.5 x 120.4cm



No 8.  Inscription XXXVIII  2000  oil on board  39.6 x 31.9cm

No 10.  Inscription XXIX  2000  oil on board  39.9 x 30cm

No 9.  Formations and Inscriptions XXVII  1998  oil on board  38 x 28cm

No 11.  Inscription XXI  2000  oil on board  37.5 x 30cm


No 12.  Untitled (Black and white)

2011 (circa)  oil on canvas on boards  125 x 194.5cm


Once again, in this painting Unproven Theory II, a visual game offers a playful paradox. The mind is tricked into accepting that what it sees may not have a fixed definition. We are free to see what we will yet there is no guarantee that the figures, objects, grounds and spaces will behave in the way we expect. Nevertheless the rules of the game seem to hold true and we are invited to regard and gauge the integrity of a discrete region of the artist’s inner world. Inscriptions occur where intention, material and action come together in ways that can send a message through time. The gesture is sustained so that many years later another eye, another being, might respond to that moment, like marks on a clay tablet telling a young scholars version of the legends of Gilgamesh or a symbolic declaration of love scratched into the bark of tree. Or perhaps there is no intended message. The moment is still recorded as in the dragging of a lizards tail through sand, the fossilized meandering of a worm in silt and all those scrapes and scratches that come from the accidental collision of the rough with the smooth. Such marks attract the eye and compel the mind to seek meaning whether or not intention played a part. SIMON PEART

Image:  No 13.  Unproven Theory II  2000  oil on canvas  76.5 x 63cm Image opposite:  No 14.  Shadows and Reflections  1985-89?  oil on canvas  128.5 x 83.5 cm



No 15.  Wedderburn Grey  1982  oil on linen  173.2 x 122cm


No 16.  Reverie  1985  oil on canvas  170.5 x 122.5cm


No 18.  Untitled  1998-2000?  oil on board  20.5 x 30.8cm

No 17.  Untitled  1998-2000?  oil on board  30.5 x 18.5cm


No 20.  Panel Painting 04/1  2004  synthetic polymer on board panels  151 x 121cm


No 19.  Untitled  1995-98?  oil on canvas  86 x 64cm


JOHN  PEART A selection from the estate 8 – 25 July 2015 1.

Tiru Blue 2011

oil on board

183 x 92cm

2.

Wedderburn Ochre

oil on board

93 x 62cm

3.

Gloaming II 1974-1991

acrylic on canvas

169.5 x 103cm

4.

Zibar 2003

oil and acrylic on canvas

170 x 240cm

5.

Panel Painting 1

2009

oil on board panels

130 x 120cm

6.

No 3 1987

oil on canvas

122 x 290cm

7.

Untitled 2005

oil on board panels

120.5 x 120.4cm

8.

Inscription XXXVIII

2000

oil on board

39.6 x 31.9cm

9.

Formations and Inscriptions XXVII

1998

oil on board

38 x 28cm

10. Inscription XXIX

2000

oil on board

39.9 x 30cm

11. Inscription XXI 2000

oil on board

37.5 x 30cm

12. Untitled (Black and white) 2011 (circa)

oil on canvas on boards

125 x 194.5cm

13. Unproven Theory II

2000

oil on canvas

76.5 x 63cm

14. Shadows and Reflections

1985-89?

oil on canvas

128.5 x 83.5 cm

15. Wedderburn Grey

1982

oil on linen

173.2 x 122cm

16. Reverie 1985

oil on canvas

170.5 x 122.5cm

17. Untitled 1998-2000?

oil on board

30.5 x 18.5cm

18. Untitled 1998-2000?

oil on board

20.5 x 30.8cm

19. Untitled 1995-98?

oil on canvas

86 x 64cm

20. Panel Painting 04/1

synthetic polymer on board panels

151 x 121cm

1989

2004


JOHN PEART 1945 - 2013 Teaching 1978-1986 Painting, East Sydney Technical College (final year students) 1993-1994 Painting, East Sydney Technical College (final year students)

Selected Individual Exhibitions 2015/1967 35 solo exhibitions at Watters Gallery, Sydney 2011 John Peart Collages, Heiser Gallery, Brisbane 2008 Tetrads, Charles Nodrum Gallery, Melbourne 2004 John Peart - Paintings 1964 - 2004, Campbelltown Arts Centre Travelling Exhibition touring NSW, Tasmania, Canberra, Western Australia, Victoria and Queensland 1989 Monotypes, Milburn + Arte, Brisbane 1988 Monotypes, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney 1986 Galerie Dusseldorf, Perth 1985 John Peart, Selected Painting 1964 76, Charles Nodrum Gallery, Melbourne (and 6 solo shows) 1982 Powell Street Gallery, Melbourne (and 1985, 1988, 1990) Seven Paintings by John Peart, 123 Charlotte St. Brisbane 1980 Solander Gallery, Canberra 1979 Victor Mace Fine Art Gallery, Brisbane (and 1986) 1977 Realities Gallery, Melbourne 1974 Abraxas Gallery, Canberra (Inaugural Exhibition) (and 1976) 1972 Powell Street Gallery, Melbourne

Selected Group Exhibitions 2015 2014 2013 2011 2009

Joe Frost and John Peart: small works on paper, Watters Gallery, Sydney Watters Gallery – 5 Decades, S H Ervin Gallery, Sydney Six Artists / Seven Days, Mary Place Gallery, Sydney Sydney Contemporary Art Fair, Carriageworks, Sydney Abstraction, Drill Hall Gallery, ANU, Canberra Salon des Refuses, S H Ervin Gallery, Sydney Wynne Prize selection, Art Gallery of New South Wales

2007 2006 2005 1999 1998 1997 1996 1994 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986/87 1986 1984 1983 1982 1977

2007: The Year in Art, S H Ervin Gallery, Observatory Hill, Sydney The Year in Art, S.H Ervin Gallery, Observatory Hill, Sydney The Year in Art, S.H Ervin Gallery, Observatory Hill, Sydney The Year in Art, S.H.Ervin Gallery, Sydney Field Work: Australian Art 1968- 2002, National Gallery of Victoria Australia Day Ambassadors for 1998Exhibition, Government House, Sydney Wynne Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Archibald Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Wynne Prize Exhibition (winner), Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Wynne Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Triennial Exhibition of Contemporary Australian Art, National Gallery of Victoria Wynne Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Sulman Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney The Wynne Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales Wynne Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney The Wynne Prize Exhibition, Art Gallery of New South Wales Portrait of a Gallery, Watters Gallery 25th anniversary exhibition, 8 regional centres until 1991 Drawing in Australia from 1770’s to 1980’s, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra Field to Figuration, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Painters & Sculptors, Museum of Modern Art, Saitama, Japan Surface for Reflexion, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney 20 Years of Abstraction, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Sydney The Field Now, Heide Park and Art Gallery, Melbourne Project 41: The Mosaic/The Grid, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Australian Perspecta 1983, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Twelve Australian Painters, Art Gallery of Western Australia Tribute to Mervyn Horton, Art Gallery of New South Wales Australian Paintings and Sculpture, 1956 1981: A Survey from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney The Seventies: Australian Paintings and Tapestries from the Collection of the National Australia Bank, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Australian Colorists ‘77, Western Australian Institute of Technology, Perth


1976 1974 1973 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965

Outlines of Australian Printmaking, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat, Victoria Philip Morris Arts Grant (first annual exhibition) Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat, Victoria Ten Years, Watters Gallery, Sydney Contemporary Australian Painting and Sculpture (toured New Zealand) Recent Australian Art, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Australian Art Today, (toured Indonesia) The Field, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne and Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney Four Sydney Painters, Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne Sydney Painters, Auckland Festival of Art, Auckland, New Zealand Survey of Young Australian Painters, Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne

Awards and Prizes 2002 2000 1997 1997 1996 1976 1976 1974 1969 1968 1968 1968 1968

Universities and Schools Club Invitation Art Award Sulman Prize, Art Gallery of New South Wales Wynne Prize Kedumba Drawing Prize Festival Of Fisher Ghost Art Prize Visual Arts and Crafts Board Grant Dalby Art Prize Philip Morris Arts Grant Myer Foundation Grant Transfield Prize Pacesetter Prize; Mirror – Waratah Prize Newcastle Prize NBN 3 Prize

Exhibition catalogue Watters Gallery, Sydney 5 - 25 July 2015 Š Artist,John Peart Estate Photographer: Diane Larter This catalogue is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted by the Copyright Act no part may be reproduced by any other process without written permission.

Selected Collections National Gallery of Australia Art Gallery of New South Wales Queensland Art Gallery Art Gallery of Western Australia Art Gallery of South Australia National Gallery of Victoria Chartwell Collection, Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney Macquarie University Wollongong City Art Gallery, New South Wales Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery New Parliament House, Canberra Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Victoria Albury Regional Gallery New England Regional Art Museum, New South Wales Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Launceston Newcastle Art Gallery Warrnambool Art Gallery, Victoria University of Sydney

University of Western Australia Shepparton Art Gallery, Victoria Artbank Dawson Waldron Allens Arthur Robinson Baker & McKenzie B.H.P. Billiton Queensland Art Gallery and Museum Monash University University of New South Wales City Art Institute, Sydney Philip Cox and Partners Pty. Ltd Kedumba Drawing Prize Collection Robert Holmes a Court Collection, Perth Tasmanian College of Advanced Education Orange City Art Gallery, New South Wales Australian National University Dalby Art Gallery, Queensland Philip Morris Art Purchase Grant Brisbane Civic Art Gallery and Museum Kerry Stokes Collection, Western Australia



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