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Biography from the Realist Group web site.
“Born in Brighton 1927, Ken Scarlett was the only child of Janet and Will Scarlett. As an adolescent he wanted to become an artist, which to him meant being a painter. However, as his parents were not wealthy, he accepted an Education Department bond and trained instead to become an art/craft teacher. To his dismay he found the course of training at Caulfield Technical College to be totally inadequate and to have virtually no links with art, past or present. His several attempts to resign were thwarted by the inability of his family to pay the bond.

Nevertheless he has some positive memories of his time at Caulfield Tech. for one member of staff, Stan Brown, allowed him to experiment by making small pieces of sculpture, which were cast solid in type-metal. It was a tentative start.

The year at Melbourne Teachers College in 1949 seemed almost equally sterile except for the fact that he made contact with some left-wing students who introduced him to the Communist Party… (which he joined) …

His first teaching appointment in 1950 was to St Arnaud where he enjoyed painting the dry landscape, the erosion gullies and the stunted gum trees. After a year overseas in 1954, he was appointed to Warragul High School in Gippsland, where the landscape appeared over-whelmingly green. Unable to cope with this ever-present lushness he gave up painting.

For three years, from 1958 he combined study at RMIT with a position as Education Officer at the National Gallery of Victoria. The instructors in the Sculpture Department were George Allen and Len Parr…

… As a Communist teacher Scarlett attended meetings of fellow travelers during the term holidays (fully documented in his ASIO file) and became acquainted with Ailsa O’Connor, also a sculptor. During his time as Education Officer at the NGV he arranged for Noel Counihan, the best known of the Social Realists, to speak at several venues and it was probably Noel Counihan who invited Scarlett to exhibit with the Realist Group. This he did annually from 1963 until 1967. He also took part in an additional exhibition when the group showed at the Newcastle City Art Gallery in 1968 … “

Director – Gryphon Gallery
Melbourne State College / Melbourne College of Advanced Education.

Lecturer – Melbourne State College.
In 1965, on behalf of Melbourne Teachers’ College (MTC) Art collection, Ken salvaged a magnificent Hugh Ramsay painting from Melbourne High School. Seated Girl 1894. The MTC paid for its’ restoration and it is in their collection.

Writers:
Date written:
2018
Last updated:
2018

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Date modified July 16, 2021, 9:49 p.m. May 6, 2019, 9:52 a.m.
References [<ExternalResource: Sculpture in the grounds. Uni of Melb. Robyn Sloggett>, <ExternalResource: The Art of Having a Bit of a Laugh. Australian Financial Review. By Fiona Moore. 31 July 1992. ,>] [<ExternalResource: Sculpture in the grounds. Uni of Melb. Robyn Sloggett>]