Master Outdoor Painters
Arthur Streeton
(1867-1943)
Arthur
Streeton was at the forefront of a small group of Australian
painters responsible for creating an Impressionist style
in the 1880’s.
Born in a small town near Melbourne, Australia, Streeton
worked as an apprentice lithographer and spent his free
time painting and drawing around the area. Streeton was
part of a younger generation of artists who admired the
French Barbizon Painters. It was this direct approach
to painting outdoors and recording contemporary life that
attracted the young Streeton to the Barbizon School.
In
1886, while sketching near Melbourne, the Streeton met
artists, Tom Roberts and Frederick McCubbin. This marked
an important turning point in Streeton’s career.
He was invited to join the other artists in their painting
camp and began associations with them that would last
for Streeton’s lifetime.
Streeton, Roberts and McCubbin organized the very first
Impressionist show in Australia. Called the “9 by
5 Impression Exhibition”, the majority of the 183
paintings on display were sketches painted on cigar box
lids measuring 9 by 5 inches. The subject matter was more
personal than anything exhibited before and redefined
the definition of “acceptable” art.
The years following this landmark show found Streeton
broadening both his abilities and subject matter. In 1896,
after a successful solo show, he decided to travel to
Europe to seek greater fame and fortune.
Success in London greatly increased Arthur Streeton’s
significance in Australia. On his return to Melbourne
in 1906, Streeton received a hero’s welcome. His
solo exhibitions were a financial success. Streeton returned
to London in 1908 and married. He joined the Medical corps
during WWI and was appointed as an official war artist.
Streeton finally return home in 1920, where he remained
for the rest of his life.
Arthur Streeton was acknowledged as Australia’s
greatest landscape painter. In this position, he increasingly
became an outspoken conservationist---denouncing the destruction
of his beloved Australian landscape. In the final years
before his death, Streeton’s paintings reflected
an unflinching dedication to preserving the land he loved.
Bibliography:
Arthur Streeton 1867-1943
Geoffrey Smith
National Gallery of Victoria
Golden Summers Heidelberg and Beyond
Jane Clark and Bridget Whitelaw
International Cultural Corporation of Australia