Mosman is the specific subject of a number of Margaret Preston’s important paintings and prints from the 1920s until the 1950s, and is also the backdrop for hundreds of other works including those images we are so familiar with – Australian flora and bird life, still life arrangements and interiors and urban harbour views. The wood block prints, Mosman Bridge (1925) and Wooden Bridge (1927) were made during her residence at the flat “Glenorie” in Musgrave Street at Mosman Bay which afforded generous harbour views. These works are an important addition to The Balnaves Gift and the Mosman Art Collection.
Margaret Preston has remained one of the most celebrated of Australia’s artists. She is a central figure in a group of early twentieth century modernists whose exuberant, cosmopolitan paintings and prints represent not only one of the most distinctive and innovative periods in Australian art, but whose works have been seen, since their time of production, as quintessentially Sydney images.
Born in 1875 in Port Adelaide, Preston was educated at Fort Street High School. Her formal art training was distinguished by her instruction under many major Australian artists. Her art tuition began at aged twelve, studying under William Lister Lister. In Victoria she studied under Fredrick McCubbin, and with Bernard Hall, and later under H.P. Gill and Hans Heysen. Teaching would also feature prominently at various points in Preston’s career and she was an influential instructor. Among her students were the notable artists Bessie Davidson, Gladys Reynell and also Stella Bowen.
Margaret Preston came to fame as a major Australian artist from the time she and husband Bill Preston made Mosman their home in early 1920. Preston was based for much of her long career in Mosman, indeed virtually all of the artist’s most significant paintings and prints were produced in a variety of Mosman residences.
Margaret Preston was vociferous in her advocacy for an Australian visual aesthetic and was widely known within the Mosman community, acting as the adjudicator in 1952 for the Mosman Art Prize which she awarded to artist Grace Cossington Smith. She lived locally – with the exception of seven years in Berowra in the 1930s – until her death in 1963.
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Provenance
Private collection
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 27 February 2011, lot 100 (unsold)
Balnaves Collection, Sydney, acquired from the above
Mosman Art Gallery, Sydney, a gift from the above -
Literature
Ure Smith, S. and Geller, L., (eds), Art in Australia, Ure Smith, Sydney, Third Series, No. 22, December 1927, pl. 36 (illus. another impression)
North, I., The Art of Margaret Preston, Art Gallery Board of South Australia, Adelaide, 1980, cat. P14, p. 54 (as ‘Mosman Bridge, c.1925’, illus., another impression)
Butel, E., Margaret Preston: The Art of Constant Rearrangement, Penguin Books, Melbourne, in association with the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1986, cat. 15, p. 87 (illus., another impression)
Butler, R., The Prints of Margaret Preston: A Catalogue Raisonné, Australian National Gallery, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, first edition 1987, cat. 61, p. 93 (illus., another impression).
Butler, R., The Prints of Margaret Preston: A Catalogue Raisonné, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, revised edition 2005, cat. 61, p. 105 (illus., another impression) -
Exhibited
Margaret Preston: The Art of Constant Rearrangement, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 27 December 1985 – 9 February 1986 (another impression)
Destination Sydney, S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, 11 December 2015 – 21 February 2016 (another impression)Photo credit Jacquie Manning