Surtees trained in Budapest and worked in Sydney in interior design, commercial display, furniture and other design-related work for commercial clients.
Byrne was a steel fabricator, later designing and manufacturing the B & D Roll-a-Door in partnership with Paul Davidson. The Roll-a-Door was originally designed by ...
Eidlitz was a graphic designer, working as an art director for USP Benson, Melbourne and working from his own studio. He received a Churchill Fellowship ...
Sculptor, painter, and mentor to many younger artists, Bert Flugelman came to Australia as a refugee shortly before the outbreak of World War II. In ...
Prolific and popular mid 20th century Melbourne newspaper cartoonist. Green made his first artistic income painting Japanese flags while stationed in New Guinea during WW2. ...
Quentin Hole was regarded as an artist of early promise in Brisbane during the 1950s but gave up exhibiting his paintings to concentrate on establishing ...
Howard is the founder of Aristoc, a Melbourne furniture design and manufacturing firm (1946-1968). Aristoc produced furniture for Grant Featherstone, Fred Lowen, Ernst Rodeck, William ...
Holding 60 solo exhibitions in his lifetime, Inson divided his time between teaching and travelling around Australia and overseas to paint foreign landscapes.
Peter (Richard Norman) Johnson (1923–2003) was a distinguished Sydney architect and academic leader. After joining Kenneth McConnel and Stan Smith in the mid 1950s, he ...
Ludlow, despite his original career with Queensland Telecom, worked as a self-taught watercolourist, later undertaking formal art training at the Central Technical College, Brisbane. He ...
Maguire was a graphic designer working first in Sydney for the magazine publisher Murrays and Fairfax, then moving to Melbourne where he did design work ...
Painter who was President of the Perth Society of Artists 1955-1958 and 1961-1962. He won the Claude Hotchin Prize for watercolours in 1961 and the ...