• What's On
  • About Us
  • Online Resources
  • Kids
  • Research
  • Venue Hire
  • Media
Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art
  • Exhibitions
    • Current
      • Paperskin
      • Artist's Choice: Lawrence Daws
        • Curator's essay
    • GoMA Collection Displays
    • QAG Collection Displays
      • Art in colonial Australia
      • Landscapes and traditions
      • Edwardians and expatriates
      • Modern art and Australia
      • Abstraction and figuration
      • Australian art: The sixties and beyond
    • On Tour
      • Frame by Frame
      • Namatjira to Now
    • Coming Soon
      • APT6
        • Artists
        • Publication
        • Opening weekend program
        • Friday nights
        • Cinema
        • Public programs
        • Education programs and resources
        • Kids' APT
        • Gallery Members
        • Visiting APT6
        • Visiting Brisbane
        • Media
        • Sponsors
    • Past
      • 2009
        • Anish Kapoor Untitled 2006-07
        • Culture Warriors
        • LJ Harvey and His Times
        • Spencer Finch
        • Creative Generation
        • The China Project
        • The Met
        • Tim Johnson: Painting Ideas
        • 150 Years: Photography in Queensland from the Gallery Collection
        • Thru the Lens: Palm Island youth photography project
        • Floating Life
        • Nurreegoo: The Art and Life of Ron Hurley 1946–2002
        • Peopled: Contemporary Art from the Collection
        • Easton Pearson
        • The view from elsewhere
      • 2008
        • Mountains and Streams: Chinese Paintings from the Asian Collection
        • Creative Generation Excellence Awards in Visual Art and Design
        • Pierre Bismuth
        • Lee Mingwei’s Gernika in sand
        • Gordon Bennett
        • Queensland design on show 2008
        • Sidney Nolan: A New Retrospective
        • Picasso & his collection
        • Light and Space: Colonial Art and Queensland
        • Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award
        • Modern Ruin
        • Place Makers: Contemporary Queensland Architects
        • Recent acquisitions
        • Eastside/Westside
        • Namatjira to Now
        • Someone’s Universe: The Art of Eugene Carchesio
        • Premier of Queensland’s National New Media Art Award
        • War: The Prints of Otto Dix
        • Contemporary Australia: Optimism
        • Making it Modern
        • Breaking Boundaries
      • 2007
        • Myth to Modern
        • Queensland Design Awards
        • Education Minister’s Awards for Excellence in Art
        • British Prints: Pop to the 90s
        • Howard Arkley
        • Katharina Grosse
        • Three Ways: Contemporary Sculpture from the Collection
        • Protest: Australian Political Posters 1972-92
        • Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award
        • Olafur Eliasson
        • Kenneth Macqueen
        • Andy Warhol
      • 2006
        • Grace Cossington Smith
        • Margaret Preston
        • Queensland Live
        • Minister's Awards
        • Xstrata Coal
        • Design Excellence in QLD
        • Streeton
        • Fairweather Room
        • APT5
      • 2005
        • Luminous
        • Smoke and Mirrors
        • Minister's Awards
        • Ron Mueck
        • The Art of Fiona Hall
        • Prime 2005
        • No Ordinary Place
        • Lee Ufan
        • Design Excellence
        • I am Making Art
        • Press Pause
        • Sparse Shadows
        • Barbara Heath
        • Kiss of the Beast
        • Made for this World
        • Exposure
      • 2004
        • Video Hits
        • Island Beats
        • Man Ray
        • Story Place Regional Tour
        • Miniatures
        • The Look of Faith
        • Blak Insights
        • Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri
        • Essentially Modern
        • White/Light
        • Families and Fictions
        • North by North-west
        • Pastels in Focus
        • Ten Thoughts about Frames
        • The Nature Machine
      • Online Archive
    • APT
      • APT6
      • APT5
      • APT 2002
        • Artists
        • Acquisitions
        • Opening events and public programs
      • APT 3 (1999)
        • Artists
        • Acquisitions
        • Opening events and public programs
      • APT 2 (1996)
        • Artists
        • Acquisitions
        • Public programs
      • APT 1 (1993)
        • Artists
        • Acquisitions
        • Opening and public programs
  • Collection
    • Indigenous Australian Art
      • Albert Namatjira
      • Mick Namarari Tjapaltjarri
      • Sunfly Tjampitjin
      • Judy Watson
      • John Mawurndjul
      • Thanakupi
      • Fiona Foley
      • Alick Tipoti
      • Destiny Deacon
      • Joe Ngallametta
      • Michael Boiyool Anning
      • Lilly Kelly Napangardi
      • Mabel Juli
      • Lena Yarinkura
      • Pedro Wonaeamirri
      • Walangkura Napanangka
      • Tony Albert
      • Brook Andrew
      • Archie Moore
    • Queensland Heritage
      • Conrad Martens
      • Joshua Ebenston & Matthew Fern
      • Sidney House stained glass window
      • R. Godfrey Rivers
      • Vida Lahey
      • Arthur Evan Read
      • Ray Crooke
      • Sam Fullbrook
      • Margaret Olley
      • Carl McConnell
    • Australian Art to 1970
      • Eugene von Guérard
      • Arthur Streeton
      • Girolamo Nerli
      • John Russell
      • AME Bale
      • Rupert Bunny
      • E. Phillips Fox
      • Roland Wakelin
      • Margaret Preston
      • Olive Cotton
      • William Dobell
      • Russell Drysdale
      • Grace Cossington Smith
      • Dorrit Black
      • Sidney Nolan
      • Max Dupain
      • Charles Blackman
      • Ian Fairweather
      • John Olsen
      • Robert Klippel
    • Contemporary Australian Art
      • Cressida Campbell
      • Gordon Bennett
      • Rosalie Gascoigne
      • Howard Arkley
      • Fiona Hall
      • William Robinson
      • Rosemary Laing
      • Gwyn Hanssen Pigott
      • David Rosetzky
      • William Yang
      • Tracey Moffatt
      • Guan Wei
      • Anne Wallace
      • Callum Morton
      • Eugene Carchesio
      • Scott Redford
      • Jan Nelson
      • Stephen Bush
      • Tony Clark
      • Patricia Piccinini
    • Asian Art
      • Neolithic storage jars
      • Jōmon culture
      • Yayoi culture
      • Ewer (yutō)
      • Bizen Kilns
      • Kanō Yasunobu
      • Unkoku Toeki
      • Kitagawa Utamaro
      • Kikugawa Eizan
      • Ichiryusai Hiroshige
    • Contemporary Asian Art
      • Huang Yongyu
      • Xu Bing
      • Montien Boonma
      • Simryn Gill
      • Kamin Lertchaiprasert
      • Zhang Huan
      • Takashi Murakami
      • Heri Dono
      • Cai Guo-Qiang
      • Nalini Malani
      • Wei Dong
      • Ah Xian
      • Nam June Paik
      • Yayoi Kusama
      • Nusra Latif Qureshi
      • Lee Ufan
      • Sara Tse
      • Tang Da Wu
      • Matthew Ngui
      • Xu Zhen
    • Contemporary Pacific Art
      • Richard Killeen
      • Sima Urale
      • Susana Kaafi
      • Gavin Hipkins
      • Michel Tuffery
      • Lisa Reihana
      • John Pule
      • Greg Semu
      • Michael Stevenson
      • Michael Parekowhai
      • Shane Cotton
      • Julian Hooper
      • Yvonne Todd
    • International Art
      • The Master of Frankfurt
      • Jacopo Tintoretto
      • Giambologna
      • Circle of Joos de Momper
      • Joshua Reynolds
      • Angelica Kauffman
      • Blandford Fletcher
      • Edgar Degas
      • Pablo Picasso
      • Walter Richard Sickert
      • Chaim Soutine
      • Yves Tanguy
      • Stanley Spencer
      • Richard Hamilton
      • Mario Giacomelli
    • Contemporary International Art
      • William Eggleston
      • Willem de Kooning
      • Bridget Riley
      • Georg Baselitz
      • Anish Kapoor
      • Rachel Whiteread
      • Martin Creed
      • Aernout Mik
      • Edward Ruscha
      • Jana Sterbak
      • Pierre Bismuth
      • Olafur Eliasson
      • Tobias Putrih
      • John Baldessari
      • Candice Breitz
      • Thomas Demand
      • Ron Mueck
      • Beat Streuli
      • Damien Hirst
      • Nigel Cooke
    • Recent Acquisitions
      • Ah Xian
      • Tony McGillick
      • Lisa Reihana
      • Shōun (Gempō Sōhan)
      • George Nona
      • Fiona Pardington
      • John Citizen
      • Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont
      • Jenny Mye
      • Max Pam
      • Scott Redford and Ritchey Sealy
      • Francesca Rosa
      • Kathy Temin
    • A – Z List of Artists
  • Education
    • Programs
      • Youth and tertiary
      • Teachers
      • Children and families
      • My Gen program
    • Resources
      • Current exhibition resources
      • Curriculum research
      • Education kits and tours
        • American Impressionism and Realism: Virtual tour
    • Bookings
      • Online group bookings
      • Group visits
      • Risk assessment guide
      • Guidelines for visitors
      • Frequently asked questions
  • Cinémathèque
    • Current programs
      • Living in the ‘70s: Counter Culture Remixes French Cinema
    • Coming Soon
      • APT6 Cinema
        • Promised Lands
        • The Cypress and the Crow: 50 Years of Iranian Animation
        • Takeshi Kitano
        • Ang Lee
        • Rithy Panh
    • Past programs
      • 2009
        • The view from elsewhere
        • Dead Country: Australian Horror Classics
        • Peter Greenaway
        • The Met Film Programs
        • Charles and Elsa Chauvel
        • Brisbane International Film Festival
        • Figuring Landscapes
        • First Australians
        • Three Chinese Directors
        • Be Afraid
        • A Portrait of Nicole Kidman
      • 2008
        • Pedro Costa
        • Contemporary Australia: Optimism
        • George A. Romero's Dead series
        • German Expressionism
        • Green Screen
        • Pere Portabella
        • My Architect
        • Brisbane international film festival
        • Message Sticks
        • Modern Ruin
        • Silent Clown
        • Picasso Film Program
        • Jacques Prévert
        • Icelandic Waves
        • Pudovkin's Mother: Silent film with Wurlitzer organ
        • Visual Music
        • Silly Symphonies
        • Pierre Bismuth
      • 2007
        • Andy Warhol Film Programs
        • Daft Punk
        • Aliens
        • Leisure Class
        • Buster Keaton
        • Breathless: French New Wave Turns 50
        • Jean-Luc Godard's Histoire(s) Du Cinema
        • Message Sticks
        • Bunuel in Mexico
        • Isabelle Huppert
        • Coming of Age
        • Japan Fantastic: Focus on Tezuka
        • Hong Kong Shanghai: Cinema Cities
        • Japan Fantastic: Before and Beyond Anime
      • 2006
        • 5th Asia-Pacific Triennial Cinema Programs
    • Cinema Resources
      • 2008
        • The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari: Flogging Expressionism in the Movies
      • 2007
        • Breathless: French New Wave Turns 50
        • The Reverse Atomic Principle of Hiroshima mon amour
        • The New New Wave in French Cinema
        • May 68: then and now
        • Pairs through the Eyes of the New Wave
        • Noli Me Tangere: Jacques Rivette, Out 1 and the New Wave
        • Jean-Luc Godards Histoire(s) Du Cinema
        • Jean Luc Godard’s Histoire du Cinema
        • Isabelle Huppert
        • Isabelle Huppert as monstrous-feminine
        • Romance of a Fruit Peddler and A String of Pearls
        • Shanghai Film History Before 1949
        • Li Shaohong’s Blush: a subversive love story
      • 2005
        • Kiss of the Beast
      • 2004
        • Video Hits: Art & Music Video
        • Jump cut: music video aesthetics
        • Pictures came and broke your heart
        • Playlist
      • 1999
        • The Liquid Medium: Video Art form the Queensland Art Gallery Collection
        • Full list of works in the exhibition
    • Calendar
  • Support Us
    • Foundation
      • Individual giving
      • Cultural gifts
      • Bequests
      • Donate now
    • Corporate Involvement
      • Corporate Events
    • Chairman's Circle
  • Members
    • Become a Gallery Member
    • Events and programs
    • Movies for Members
    • Young Members programs
    • Program and event bookings
    • Calendar
    • Staff Picks
  • Shop
    • Australian Art
    • Indigenous Art
    • Gallery Publications
    • Multiples
    • Art Merchandise
    • What's New
    • Book Search
    • Store Information
    • E-News
Modern art and Australia - Banner Image

George Lambert | Australia/England 1873 -1930 | Self portrait with Ambrose Patterson, Amy Lambert and Hugh Ramsay c1901-1903 | Oil on canvas | 51.5 x 177cm | Purchased 2009 with funds from Philip Bacon, AM, through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation | Collection: Queensland Art Gallery

Queensland Art Gallery Collection Displays

Exhibitions

  • Current
  • GoMA Collection Displays
  • QAG Collection Displays
    • Art in colonial Australia
    • Landscapes and traditions
    • Edwardians and expatriates
    • Modern art and Australia
    • Abstraction and figuration
    • Australian art: The sixties and beyond
  • On Tour
  • Coming Soon
  • Past
  • APT

Modern art and Australia

DOBELL,_William,_The_Cypriot,_1940.jpg

William Dobell | Australia 1899-1970 | The Cypriot 1940 | Oil on canvas | 123.3 x 123.3cm | Gift of the Godfrey Rivers Trust through Miss Daphne Mayo 1943 | Collection: Queensland Art Gallery

Gallery 11, QAG

In the first half of the twentieth century, Australian society modernised rapidly. This gallery shows the many ways Australian artists responded to the experience of modernisation. Like expatriate artists in previous decades, artists in the key centres of Sydney and Melbourne often looked to Europe for inspiration. Their eclectic and often cautious art became increasingly influenced by European modernist culture, at first through reproductions in books and magazines, and later through more frequent travel abroad.

Several contending forms of Modernism developed in Australia. Sydney artists in the 1920s and 1930s were closer to the urbane Modernism of European design and decor, exemplified in the publications Art in Australia and The Home. By contrast, in the 1940s and 1950s, Melbourne artists – especially those supported by patrons John and Sunday Reed – became famous for a raw expressionist idiom that drew its passion from the turbulence of the war years, and later from the struggle to develop an authentically Australian cultural vision. Works from both groups are displayed in this gallery.

Modernism — however manifested — was only one story in Australian art during this period. It was certainly not officially sanctioned, nor even widely popular. Modernist artists struggled for recognition where more traditional conceptions of artistic practice continued to flourish, especially in landscape and portraiture. This display exemplifies this climate of contention, and indicates the importance of traditional, as well as innovative, artistic idioms in the developing Australian culture of the time.

Wartime in Melbourne

From European settlement on, most Australian artists had sought to define their world through landscape painting. In the period of World War Two, however, art concerned with the human condition and urban realities was developing in the cities. A radical group of Melbourne artists, the so-called ‘Angry Penguins’, created their expressionist art against this cultural backdrop. The group included Arthur Boyd, Albert Tucker, Joy Hester, John Perceval and Sidney Nolan, and took its name from a magazine published by Max Harris and John Reed, which championed art that was vital, spontaneous and anti-establishment. Reed and his wife, Sunday, became the patrons of the group and their home, ‘Heide’, on the outskirts of Melbourne – now Heide Museum of Art – was the focus of fervent discussions about contemporary art.

Though the artists in this group adopted individual styles, they shared an interest in various strands of European Modernism, including Surrealism and German Expressionism. Artists who migrated to Australia in the pre and postwar period, including Josl Bergner and Danila Vassilieff, whose sculpture is shown in this gallery, invigorated this scene, bringing with them direct experience of international trends – Vassilieff’s advocacy for child art was particularly interesting for his Australian contemporaries. The paintings made by the group, both during and immediately after the war years, highlighted the social turmoil and anxiety accompanying the conflict.

The landscape tradition was reinvigorated by these modernist developments. Drysdale’s surrealist-influenced paintings introduced a note of tension that has persisted in Australian landscape painting through the subsequent decades, and other works, such as Boyd’s postwar Berwick landscape, while lighter in both palette and subject, retain a distinctly expressionist style.

  • Email to friend
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • ^ Top
  • Home
  • Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art
  • Queensland Art Gallery Collection Displays
  • Modern art and Australia
Visitor Information
  • Visiting the Gallery
  • Contact us
Join Us
  • Gallery Members
  • Artmail
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Support Us
  • Foundation
  • Donation
  • Corporate involvement
General
  • Feedback
  • Copyright
  • Privacy & Security Statement
  • Sitemap
  • Right to Information
Queensland Government logo