Marjorie Gwynne

Marjorie Gwynne, Australian artist

Marjorie Gwynne (born Marjorie Campbell Church: 7 April 1886 – 12 June 1958) was an Australian artist who lived in Adelaide.[1] She worked both in oils and watercolours and was known for her strong use of tertiary colours especially in landscape and still life.[2] Her early style was impressionist, but later developed a more modernist style, influenced by Dorrit Black.

Early life and career

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Gywnne was born in Adelaide in 1886 to Jennie (nee Johnson) and Harry Church. In 1904, she commenced her art studies under the guidance of Hayley Lever.[2] In 1906, she began studying at the South Australian School of Design with Archibald Collins and continued studies with him until 1919.[2] In 1910, the Adelaide Drawing and Sketch Club produced a magazine entitled The High Light with literary and artworks from various Australian writers and artists, including Mary Gilmore. Gwynne (then known as M. C. Church) had two portrait sketches and a landscape in the magazine.[3] In 1918, she exhibited works at an exhibition organised by Collins for the war effort. Her work was described as having an intensity of colour and tone in watercolours and oils.[4] That same year, Church married Edward Gywnne[2] and began exhibiting under the name Marjorie Gwynne.

Later career

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In 1941, Gwynne completed a portrait of Daisy Bates, the Australian journalist and anthropologist.[5] It was included in an exhibition in 1952 along with works by Nora Heyson, Jacqueline Hick and Elaine Haxton.[6] The portrait of Bates now hangs in the Art Gallery of South Australia. A preliminary watercolour of the subject, completed in 1940, can be found in the collection at Carrick Hill.[7]

In 1941, the National Gallery of Australia purchased its first painting by Gwynne and a report at the time commented that "she is one of those artists who is also a thinker. She paints flowers at times, and pays them the compliment of visiting them where they grow … instead of chopping their heads off, putting them in a pot, and painting them reflected in a shiny table."[8]

In 1944, Gwynne became a member of "Group 9", a group of Adelaide artists brought together by Dorrit Black to support each other and hold exhibitions. Their first exhibition was in 1944, and a review of it describes Gwynne's work as "vivid, convincing, and colorful, [it] first attracts, then pleases and satisfies."[9] An exhibition by the group in 1951 again praised both Black and Gwynne's work, but was less enthusiastic of the work submitted by Jeffrey Smart.[10] In 1954, Gwynne's painting Still life with melons was selected for a special exhibition commemorating the visit to Australia by Queen Elizabeth II, along with works by Nora Heyson, Hans Heyson, Jeffrey Smart and others.[11]

Gwynne's work is part of the permanent collections of the following museums:

Her work was also represented in two major exhibitions at the AGSA, South Australian Women Artists 1890s–1940s (1994) and Modern Australian Women: paintings and prints 1925–1945 (2000–2001).[2] In 2021, her work appeared in an exhibition titled Matter at the Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery.[16]

Gwynne died in Adelaide on 12 June 1958.

References

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  1. ^ "Biography of Marjorie Gwynne".
  2. ^ a b c d e Hylton, Jane (2000). Modern Australian women: paintings and prints 1925-1945. Art Gallery of South Australia. ISBN 0-7308-3036-5.
  3. ^ The High Light. G. Robertson. 1910.
  4. ^ "Archibald Collins studio exhibition". Trove: National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ "Remembered by a painting she liked". Advertiser. 31 July 1952.
  6. ^ "Fine display by leading artists". Advertiser. 15 July 1952.
  7. ^ "Majorie Gwynne". Carrick Hill.
  8. ^ "Great Australian artist mourned". News. 4 October 1941.
  9. ^ "Group 9 makes its bow". Mail. 4 November 1944.
  10. ^ "Group 9 paintings are mostly good". Trove: National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "Art show for visit of Queen". Trove: National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "Marjorie Gwynne". AGSA - Online Collection. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  13. ^ "Marjorie Gwynne (b.1886, d.1958)". Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  14. ^ "Marjorie Campbell Gwynne 1886 - 1958". www.carrickhill.sa.gov.au. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  15. ^ "Marjorie Gwynne - Search the Collection, National Gallery of Australia". National Gallery of Australia. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  16. ^ "Matter: Works from the Cruther Collection of Women's Art" (PDF).