Ron Robertson-Swann

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Ron Robertson-Swann OAM (born 1941, Sydney), is an Australian sculptor, best known for his controversial abstract public sculpture Vault (1980). His sculpture has been described as being in the Anthony Caro style [1]. Which he adopted after studying at St Martins School of Art, London, in the 1960s. He studied under Lyndon Dadswell and was an assistant to Henry Moore [2]. He works part-time as a lecturer at the National Art School and is the artistic adviser to the popular annual exhibition Sculpture by the Sea [3]. He was a founding member of the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council [4] and has won numerous awards including the Comalco Invitational Sculpture Award, the Transfeld Prize and the Alice Prize.
Graeme Sturgeon, the pre-eminent Australian sculpture historian and critic, described Robertson-Swann in 1980 as “the most consistent of the Classic Formalist, that is, the one most concerned to produce a sculpture which, while obviously of its era, transcends considerations of style in search of a timeless sense of rightness.” [5]

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[edit] References

  • Wallis, Geoffrey J. Peril in the square. Melbourne: Indra, 2004 - 2006