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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early years  





2 England  





3 Sydney  





4 Alice Springs  





5 Fiji  





6 Gallery A (Melbourne)  





7 Linear extension  





8 Peter Graham Gallery  Queensberry Street Gallery (Melbourne)  





9 Final years  





10 Awards won  





11 Publications  





12 Collections  





13 Sources  





14 Primary source material publicly available  





15 References  














Peter Benjamin Graham






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from New Epoch Notation Painting)

Peter Graham
Peter Graham, Sydney, 1953
Born4 June 1925
Died15 April 1987(1987-04-15) (aged 61)

Peter Benjamin Graham (4 June 1925 – 15 April 1987) was an Australian visual artist, printer, and art theorist.

In 1954, Graham began to explore native Australian wildlife (notably Kangaroos) and themes associated with Aboriginal culture, using the visual languages of European figurative modernism and, later, geometric abstraction.

He began developing a new form of visual geometry related to Chaos Theory from 1960, eventually called Thematic Orchestration. The new visual language enabled the 2D deconstruction and synthesis of an observed subject, in a way fundamentally different from traditional abstraction. Thematic Orchestration allows the artist to 'grow' an image, producing almost infinite conscious invention.

In 1964, Graham began developing what he called a high-level visual notation system for pure visual imagery, which he first named "Notation Painting" and later "New Epoch Art".[citation needed]

Graham became a pioneer of the Australian artist-run initiative movement and running The Queensberry Street Gallery in association with Victorian Printmakers' Group from 1973 until 1978.

In 2006, Graham's 1945 painting Peter Lalor Addressing the Miners Before Eureka featured in a major Australian travelling exhibition celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Eureka Stockade. This painting is also featured in Riot or Revolution,[1] a dramatized history documentary on the Eureka Stockade directed by Don Parham[2] and produced by Parham Media Productions in association with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2005.

Early years[edit]

Peter Lalor Addressing the Miners Before Eureka by Peter Graham, Oil On Canvas 1945
Head Of A Woman by Peter Graham, 1949, Ink and pastel on paper 52 × 38.5 cm
Graham at The Abby Arts Centre, England, 1947 with his painting Old Age And Youth
The Blind Fiddler by Peter Graham, 1947, Oil On Canvas 81 × 51 cm

Peter Graham was born 4 June 4, 1925 and raised in the Melbourne suburb of Hartwell. He was awarded a scholarship to Melbourne Technical College Art School for one year in 1939. He studied Hand Lithography with Ross McClintock Studios (Colour separation from artists' originals, drawn as lithographic plates – 24 sheet positives, etc.) between 1940 and 1941. Graham transferred his indenture to PhotoGravures Pty Ltd. in 1941. There, he was trained by master craftsmen in facsimile reproduction and pre-press Rotogravure techniques during the war years. He received his Certificate of Completion of Apprenticeship in 1946.

Between 1941 and 1946, Graham studied fine art with Victor Greenhalgh and John Rowell in night classes at Melbourne Technical College – figure and portraiture.

In 1945, Graham joined the Victorian Artists Society and exhibited his first painting in the Australia at War Exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria. At the same time, he began his association with the Melbourne Social Realism group, which included: Noel Counihan, Josl Berger,[3] Victor O'Connor, Ma Mahood, Herbert McClintock, Rembrandt McClintock, Frank Andrew, and Nutta Buzzacott. He exhibited regularly at the Victorian Artists Society until 1947.

In 1946, he was awarded the Ferntree Gully Art Prize for best watercolour, 'Back Streets of Hawthorn'; a year later, he was awarded the Herald prize for best drawing, 'The Smokers'. He left for England with Grahame King in August 1947.

England[edit]

Between 1947 and 1949, Graham lived and painted at The Abbey Arts Centre in New Barnet, London, along with artists Leonard French, James Gleeson, Douglas Allan Green, Stacha Halpern, Grahame King, Inge King and Robert Klippel. During this time, he also befriended the Irish 'folk' artist Gerald Dillon who lived nearby and who introduced Graham to the visual languages of Picasso and Matisse. He exhibited in group shows at William Ohly's Berkeley Galleries, and the Contemporary Artists' Society in London.[4]

In 1948, Graham studied drawing under Bernard MeninskyatCentral School of Art, London. But with his money running short, he decided to go back to work at Odhams Press. He specialized in the inverted half-tone Dultgen process and masked colour separation until 1950.

In 1950, Graham traveled through France and Italy before returning to Sydney under a three-year contract to Australian Consolidated Press working as a specialist in colour separation.

Sydney[edit]

Between 1951 and 1953, Graham exhibited paintings in various group shows in Sydney, including the Inaugural Blake Prize for Religious Art.

Alice Springs[edit]

Graham tested his BSA 500 motorcycle in Melbourne, just before heading off to Alice Springs.

In 1954, Graham rode a BSA 500 motorcycle non-stop from Sydney to Melbourne. After rebuilding the bike, he headed across to Adelaide then rode solo up along the route of what is now the Stuart HighwaytoAlice Springs over five days. There he worked as a builder's laborer for 18 months while painting on the side, until the end of 1955. During this time he worked and painted alongside Aboriginal artists, Adolf Inkamala and the Pareroultja Brothers. He helped build the John Flynn Memorial Church[5] and government housing at Hermannsburg Mission. At Hermannsburg, Graham met anthropologist Ted Strehlow, who transformed his way of seeing the Australian landscape and Aboriginal culture.

Fiji[edit]

Graham spent six months in Fiji painting and drawing in 1956.

Gallery A (Melbourne)[edit]

1956–1960: Graham returned to Melbourne, rejoined PhotoGravures Pty Ltd. Shared a studio with Leonard French and befriended the New Zealand born artist George Johnson, who introduced Graham to the work of Kandinsky, Klee and Mondrian. Painted a series of abstract works based on his Central Australian experience. These were exhibited at Gallery A (Melbourne) in 1960, founded in the same year by Max Hutchinson and Clement Meadmore.

Linear extension[edit]

Peter Graham Gallery – Queensberry Street Gallery (Melbourne)[edit]

From 1971 to 1978, Graham created a series of experimental works using photographic and lithographic techniques and materials.

In 1971, Graham befriended artist Paul Cavell and collaborated with him on his Notation Paintings between 1974 and 1976.

In 1973, he opened the Peter Graham Gallery at 225 Queensberry Street, Carlton (6 April) supported by a photo-lithographic workshop in the same premises. Closed this gallery in 1974 and reopened it as the Queensberry Street Gallery in 1977.

Graham's Solo Exhibitions at the Queensberry Street Gallery:

During 1977, Graham collaborated with Noela Hjorth[7] and the Victorian Printmakers' Group which at the time was lobbying for space in the Victorian Government's proposed Meatmarket Craft space. He was appointed to the Interim Committee in the formation stages of the Meatmarket Craft Centre[8] and helped to draw up a plan for the establishment of an access workshop for Printmakers at the Meatmarket. As part of his involvement, he set up a plate-graining service for artists and student Printmakers and became the manager of this facility.

Victorian Printmakers' Workshop group show opened at The Queensberry Street Gallery by Professor Bernard Smith 26 July 1977.

Graham closed his gallery in 1978 and transferred his workshop to a home studio in Canterbury (Melbourne) at the end of the year.

Final years[edit]

Graham returned to development of Notation Painting in 1986 in collaboration with his son, Philip Mitchell Graham. Arranged with Jan Martin for a retrospective exhibition to be held at her gallery in Lyttleton Street, Castlemaine, Victoria.

Graham was admitted to the Hospital where he was diagnosed with Cancer of the oesophagus December 1986.

Graham died on 15 April 1987 at Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital, Melbourne.

A memorial exhibition for Graham opened at the Lyttleton Gallery, Castlemaine in central Victoria on 6 June 1987, two days after what would have been his 62nd birthday.

Awards won[edit]

Publications[edit]

Collections[edit]

Sources[edit]

Primary source material publicly available[edit]

In 1989 Cynthia Graham was interviewed about her husband, Peter Graham.[16]

There are currently two tape recordings by Peter Graham available at the National Library of Australia, Petherick Oral History Reading Room:

References[edit]

  • ^ NGA.gov.au
  • ^ "Contempart.org.uk". Archived from the original on 27 November 1999. Retrieved 17 May 2007.
  • ^ NT.gov.au Archived 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Lib.unimelb.edu.au
  • ^ Ardaddiction.net Archived 9 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ VWA.org Archived 5 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Arena.org
  • ^ CICD.org
  • ^ "Peter Graham, Bush Lyric". Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  • ^ Books.google.com
  • ^ Parham-media.com
  • ^ Parham-media.com
  • ^ Theage.com.au
  • ^ Blackman, Barbara (13 July 1989). "Cynthia Graham interviewed by Barbara Blackman [sound recording]". Retrieved 7 January 2019.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peter_Benjamin_Graham&oldid=1224612833"

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