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painter and illustrator, came to Australia from England after World War I, having married an Australian, Captain W. Ian Macdonald, a nephew of Sir Rupert Clarke born at the Clarkes’ Melbourne mansion, Clivedon. Trained as an artist in London, Barbara began exhibiting shortly before the war and had two of her watercolours hung at the Royal Academy. During the war, she spent most of her time cooking in a soldiers’ hospital in London, her artistic activities being confined to making sketches in spare moments for her husband serving with the British Cavalry in France for the duration. Home commented that they 'adorned many a dug-out and mess-room’.

Her first publication in Australia was a children’s book, as was her second and apparently last; A New Book of Old Rhymes appeared in 1920 and Lee Ivatt’s Princess Herminie and the Tapestry Prince and Other Stories in 1922. Both were solely illustrated by Macdonald and published by Sydney Ure Smith’s Art in Australia Ltd. She also wrote and illustrated a serial, 'The Epistles of Pamela’, published in Ure Smith’s Home in 1921. A witty tale about Australian rural life as experienced by a sophisticated English newchum, this was a self-depreciating caricature of her own early married life in Australia. The apparent self-portrait illustrated here, captioned ’106° in the shade. (The flies have already formed a halo in anticipation of my speedy departure to a better and a cooler world!)’, comes from it.

Writers:
Callaway, Anita
Kerr, Joan
Date written:
1995
Last updated:
2011

Difference between this version and previous

Field Changes
Biography
Initial contributors
  • Callaway, Anita
  • Kerr, Joan
  • Callaway, Anita Note:
  • Kerr, Joan Note: