1. Exhibition Shows Brett Whiteley's Earliest Work

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    artwork: SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA.- An exhibition of the earliest works of Brett Whiteley during the period 1955-65 shows his pivotal shift from abstraction to figuration and the establishment of his international reputation. The exhibition called Sydney Genesis and Beyond 1955-65 has over 60 drawings, paintings and sculptures which span Sydney, Italy, France and London. Many have rarely been seen before. In 1958 Whiteley was nineteen years old and fascinated by artists such as Russell Drysdale, Donald Friend, William Scott and Graham Sutherland whose works he had seen hanging at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. These works are on display in this exhibition at the Brett Whiteley Studio for the first time to allow speculation on how during the first ten years of Whiteley's artistic journey the young man might have interpreted the visions and methods of his older peers in the shaping of his own visual language. In 1959 Whiteley submitted a number of paintings including Sofala and July Painting for the Italian Government Travelling Art Scholarship. The prize was judged by Russell Drysdale and was awarded to Whiteley. This exhibition traces the arc of this early decade of Whiteley's experimentations and explorations with drawings, paintings and making objects. These early struggles are also some of the most interesting and beautiful work in his long and prestigious career.


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