The Art Gallery of New South Wales opens "Grand Weekend" |
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| Written by Ennis Comstock |
| Wednesday, 02 September 2009 05:30 |
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These elegant rooms house Sydney’s premier collections of both European art, from the Renaissance to Impressionism and Australian art, from colonisation to the end of the nineteenth century. It’s also the area where some of the greatest Australian artists walked. Roberts, Streeton and the young George Lambert must have been proud to find on show the first official recognition of their achievement by any state art gallery. The Grand Courts have gone through major refurbishment, resulting in more works on the walls, more sculptures and for the first time in 50 years, work by the First Australians will feature alongside the gallery’s colonial collection. The majestic Pukumani grave posts made by Indigenous artists from the small Tiwi community on Melville Island were removed more than 50 years ago from the Grand Courts. These 17 poles, the centre piece of the gallery’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander collection, will take pride of place back in the Grand Courts. Accompanying these sculptures will be similar period bark paintings from across the Arnhem Land region. There will be a larger
display of Australian sculpture ranging from the mid 19th to early 20th
centuries. Amongst the works exhibited are a superb group of sculptures by
Bertram Mackennal, the first significant Australian-born sculptor, who achieved
exceptional success in Paris and London in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. The ‘new’ Grand Courts, will house more than 300 paintings. Favourites including Tom Roberts’ Bailed Up (1895) and The Golden Fleece (1894), Elioth Gruner’s Spring Frost (1919), Arthur Streeton’s Fire's on (1891), Poynter’s The Queen of Sheba visiting the Court of King Solomon (1890) and Leighton’s Cymon and Iphigenia (1884) will be seen in a new light. Weekend highlights:
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There will be a larger
display of Australian sculpture ranging from the mid 19th to early 20th
centuries. Amongst the works exhibited are a superb group of sculptures by
Bertram Mackennal, the first significant Australian-born sculptor, who achieved
exceptional success in Paris and London in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. 
