John Perceval
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John Perceval | |
John Perceval, Self portrait (1946) |
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Birth name | Linwood Robert Steven South |
Born | February 1, 1923 Bruce Rock, Western Australia, Australia |
Died | October 15, 2000 (aged 77) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Field | Painter, Ceramicist |
Awards | McCaughey Prize (1958) Wynne Prize (1960) Officer of the Order of Australia (1991) |
John de Burgh Perceval (1 February 1923 - 15 October 2000) was a well-known Australian artist. Perceval was the last surviving member of a group known as the Angry Penguins who redefined Australian art in the 1940s. Other members included John and Sunday Reed, Joy Hester, Sidney Nolan, Arthur Boyd and Albert Tucker.
Born Linwood Robert Steven South at Bruce Rock, Western Australia, the second child of Robert South (a wheat farmer) and Dorothy née Dolton. His parents separated in 1925 and he remained at his father’s farm until reunited with his mother in Melbourne in 1935. Following the marriage of his mother to William de Burgh Perceval, he changed his name to John and adopted the surname de Burgh Perceval.
In 1938 Perceval contracted polio and was hospitalised, giving him the opportunity to further his skills at drawing and painting. Enlisting in the army in 1941 Perceval first met and befriended Arthur Boyd. After leaving the army and moving into the Boyd family home at Open Country, Murrumbeena, he married Boyd's younger sister Mary in 1944. Together he and Mary Boyd produced four children.
Perceval held his first solo exhibition at the Melbourne Book Club in 1948 and showed regularly with the Contemporary Art Society. Between 1949 and 1955 he concentrated on producing earthenware ceramics and helped to establish the Arthur Merric Boyd Pottery in Murrumbeena. Returning to painting in 1956 Perceval produced a series of images of Williamstown and Gaffney's Creek.
Moving to England in 1963 Perceval held solo exhibitions in London, and travelled to Europe, before returning to Australia in 1965 to take up the first Australian National University Creative Fellowship. John Perceval, a major retrospective exhibition, was held at Albert Hall, Canberra in 1966. Author Margaret Plant's monograph John Perceval, was published in 1971.
Suffering from alcoholism and schizophrenia in 1974 Perceval committed himself to the psychiatric hospital Larundel, Melbourne, where he remained until 1981. John Perceval: A Retrospective Exhibition of Paintings was held at Heide Park and Art Gallery in 1984. Perceval was awarded Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 1991, the year after the National Gallery of Victoria organised John Perceval: A Retrospective. Prior to his death Scudding Swans (1959) sold for $552,500, a record for a living Australian painter. Perceval is survived by his four children, all of whom are practicing artists today.
[edit] Honours and awards
- 1959: McCaughey Prize
- 1960: Wynne Prize for Dairy Farm, Victoria
- 1991: Officer of the Order of Australia for service to the visual arts
[edit] Biography
- Allen, Traudi (1992). John Perceval. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84489-8.
- Plant, Margaret (1971). John Perceval. Melbourne: Lansdowne Australian art library. ISBN 0701803509.