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Biography |
William Dobell was born on 24 September 1899 at Cooks Hill in Newcastle, the sixth and youngest child of Robert Dobell, a bricklayer,and his wife Margaret Emma Wrightson. At Cooks Hill Commercial Public School his teacher, John Walker, noticed his talent for drawing and encouraged him. By 1916 he was working as a technical draughtsman for a local architect, Wallace Lintott Porter. ¶ In 1924 he moved to Sydney where he worked for the pressed metal manufacturers' Wunderlich, while undertaking evening classes at the Sydney Art School under Henry Gibbons. His precocious talent for drawing soon attracted attention. When he was awarded the NSW Travelling Art Scholarship in 1929, both Wunderlich and the Committee for the Artists' Ball supplemented the funds as they knew this student did not have a wealthy family to subsidise his international travel. ¶ He travelled to London and enrolled in the Slade School in late 1929 In order to survive the bleak years of the Great Depression Dobell drew A fellow student, Nancy Kilgour (married to Jack Noel Kilgour) noted in her diary how awkwardly Dobell behaved in the presence of women. He had an acutely cynical observant eye, and his small swift paintings of these years effectively captured the follies and the pretentions of London life with paintings such as _Mrs South Kensington_ (1937 AGNSW) and _The Dead Landlord_ (1936) a painting which inspired Patrick White to write _The Ham Funeral_. He could also paint gently romantic studies such as _The Boy at the Basin_ (1932 AGNSW) and his sensuous study _The Sleeping Greek As his paintings had been hung bq). On the Linebq). at the Royal Academy, and as he had easily mastered the ironic yet technically adept academic style of the Slade tradition, This attempt at personal camouflage was destroyed in 1944 when he was awarded the Archibald Prize for the portrait of fellow artist, Joshua Smith. Smith had been one of three other men sharing a tent with Dobell in Army service, but this detail did not stop the _Daily Mirror_ from publishing a headline that was designed to imply a greater intimacy. The painting was under attack partly because in awarding the prize to Dobell, who was associated with the Society of Artists, the Trustees had broken a time-honoured unwritten agreement that it was the turn of a Royal Art Society painter to win. Two unsuccessful artists who were also members of the Royal Art Society, Mary Edwards and Joseph Wolinski, sued the Trustees of the National Art Gallery of NSW, claiming that Dobell's portrait of Smith was bq). not a portrait but a caricature bq).. ¶ It was hard for the Trustees to openly defend the case, as those associated with the Royal Art Society were happily providing information to Howard Ashton who was the art critic of the Sydney _Sun_, as well as the Despite the attacks and innuendo in the media, support came from surprising sources. Lionel Lindsay, a Even though he had not been on trial, Dobell was traumatised by both the courtroom experience, and the media attention. He retreated to his sister's house at Wangi Wangi on Lake Macquarie. Oddly enough the ordeal by media had made Dobell a popular figure. His paintings never fully recovered the satirical edge of his earlier studies, but their sweetness made them greatly admired as subjects for reproduction in _Womens' Weekly_ and other magazines. He was awarded the 1948 Archibald Prize for his portrait of fellow artist Margaret Olley, and the Wynne for _Storm approaching Wangi_.He visited New Guinea as the guest of Sir Edward Hallstrom and made many delightful small oil sketches of a more exotic life, as well as painting society portraits. He painted the aged poet Dame Mary Gilmore, and eight portraits of the beautician Helena Rubenstein. His most famous commission was of the Prime Minister, Robert Gordon Menzies, a commission for _Time_ magazine. Neither the subject nor the artist had much sympathy for each other, and both placed this on the public record. He was knighted in 1966, a year after Menzies' retirement. ¶ Dobell died at Wangi Wangi of congestive heart failure, on 13 May 1970 and directed that his estate be used to establish the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation. |