Arthur Streeton

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Arthur Streeton by George Lambert (1917).
Arthur Streeton by George Lambert (1917).

Sir Arthur Ernest Streeton (8 April 18671 September 1943) was an Australian landscape painter. He was born in Mount Duneed, near Geelong, and his family moved to Richmond in 1874. He commenced study at the National Gallery Schools in 1882. Streeton was influenced by French Impressionism and the works of Turner. During this time he began his association with fellow artists Frederick McCubbin and Tom Roberts — at Melbourne including at Box Hill and Heidelberg. In 1885 Streeton presented his first exhibition at the Victorian Academy of Art. He found employment as an apprentice lithographer under Charles Troedel.

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[edit] Eaglemont

Golden Summer, Eaglemont by Arthur Streeton (1889) bought by the National Gallery of Australia for $3.5 million
Golden Summer, Eaglemont by Arthur Streeton (1889) bought by the National Gallery of Australia for $3.5 million

In 1888 in his painting of the Yarra River valley, Still glides the stream and shall forever glide (1888), Streeton shows a winding river in the middle of the picture and a landscape of bright yellowish goldish colour, very typically Australian. The painting was the first of his landscapes which was bought by a large art gallery, with the Art Gallery of New South Wales purchasing it in the same year that it was painted.

 'Sunlight Sweet', Coogee by Arthur Streeton (1890).
'Sunlight Sweet', Coogee by Arthur Streeton (1890).

In 1897 Streeton sailed for London on the Polynesien, stopping at Port Said before continuing on via Cairo and Naples. He held an exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1900 and became a member of the Chelsea Arts Club in 1903. While Streeton had developed a considerable reputation in Australia, he failed to achieve the same success in England. His trips to London were financed by the sales of his paintings at home in Australia. His time in England reinforced a strong sense of patriotism towards the British Empire and, like many, anticipated the coming war with Germany with some enthusiasm.

Streeton returned to Australia in 1906 and completed some paintings at Mount Macedon in February 1907 before returning to London in October. Streeton painted in Venice in September 1908 and the resulting works were exhibited in Australia in July 1909 as "Arthur Streeton's Venice".

Streeton returned to Australia in April 1914 to conduct exhibitions in Sydney and Melbourne. He returned to England in early 1915 and, along with other members of the Chelsea Arts Club, including Tom Roberts, he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps (British Army) at the age of 48. He worked at the 3rd London General Hospital in Wandsworth and reached the rank of corporal. Streeton was deeply affected by the sights he encountered in the hospital and was discharged in February 1917 as medically unfit.

[edit] Official War Artist

Mount St Quentin, oil-on-canvas, completed in 1918.
Mount St Quentin, oil-on-canvas, completed in 1918.

Having recovered, Streeton was made an Australian Official War Artist with the Australian Imperial Force, holding the rank of lieutenant, and he travelled to France on 14 May 1918 and was attached to the 2nd Division. As a war artist, Streeton continued to deal in landscapes and his works have been criticised for failing to concentrate on the fighting soldiers. Unlike the more famous wartime works depicting the definitive moments of battle, such as George Lambert's Anzac, the landing 1915, Streeton produced "military still life", capturing the everyday moments of the war. Streeton observed that, "True pictures of battlefields are very quiet looking things. There's nothing much to be seen, everybody and thing is hidden and camouflaged."

Amiens, the key of the west, oil-on-canvas, completed in 1919.
Amiens, the key of the west, oil-on-canvas, completed in 1919.

His most famous war painting, Amiens, the key of the west, a landscape of the Amiens countryside with dirty plumes of battlefield smoke staining the horizon, remains a powerful image of war. A similar scene is depicted in Streeton's The Somme valley near Corbie with a peaceful rural setting in the foreground and the smoke of an artillery bombardment in the distance.

Streeton returned to Australia in December 1919 and resumed painting in the Grampians and Dandenong Ranges. Streeton built a house on five acres (20,000 m²) at Olinda in the Dandenongs where he continued to paint. He won the Wynne Prize in 1928 with Afternoon Light, Goulburn Valley. He was an art critic for The Argus from 1929 to 1935 and in 1937 was knighted for services to the arts. He married Esther Leonora Clench, a Canadian violinist, in 1908. Streeton died in September 1943. He is buried at Fern Tree Gully cemetery.

[edit] Prices

Streeton's paintings are amongst the most collectible of Australian artists and attracted high prices during his life time. Golden Summer, Eaglemont was sold for around 1000 guineas in 1924 and in the 1980s it was bought in a private sale by the National Gallery of Australia for US$3.5 million, a price since considered excessive. In 1985, Settler's Camp sold at auction for AU$800,000 and this remained the record auction price for Streeton's work until 23 May 2005, when his 1890 painting, Sunlight Sweet, Coogee, was sold for AU$204 million (AU$18.53 Million before tax), becoming only the second painting by an Australian artist to exceed the AU$2 million mark at auction (after Frederick McCubbin's Bush Idyll which sold for AU$23 million in 1998).The painting was part of the Foster's Group collection and was sold at auction by Sotheby's.

Streeton's works appear in many major Australian galleries and museums, including the Australian War Memorial, National Gallery of Victoria, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the National Gallery of Australia.

[edit] Love notes?

Recently, secret declarations of love of men have been discovered within one of Streeton's artworks. The inscriptions in his 1890 painting 'Spring' include the words "Bill Walker, my sweetheart". A male figure has also been discovered within the artwork. The figure was later painted over, but a faint outline can still be seen on close inspection.

The National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) discovered the inscription under a microscope while restoring the painting.

[edit] External links

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