Alannah Coleman (3 November 1918 – 13 September 1998) was an Australian painter, gallery director and dealer in Australian art who drew valuable attention to the work of expatriates to England in the 1950s–1990s and increased awareness of Australian art and artists in Europe.
Alannah Coleman | |
---|---|
Born | Melbourne, Australia | November 3, 1918
Died | London, England |
Education | National Gallery of Victoria schools |
Spouses |
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Children | twins Alister and Simone |
Parents |
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Elected | International Association of Art Critics |
Early life
editAlannah Coleman was born in 1918 in Melbourne, and her parents Irene Monica (née Duffy) and Ernest Coleman separated when she was seven. She then lived in a spartan rear flat at 31 Marine Parade, St Kilda with her politically active mother and Irish grandparents, from whose Catholicism she developed a strong sense of identity.[1]
National Gallery schools
editColeman's mother encouraged her interest in art, and from the age of fourteen Coleman studied at the National Gallery of Victoria schools in Melbourne from 1933 to 1939, under William B. McInnes and Charles Wheeler. Her attractiveness, social talents and calm demeanour noted by her associates[1] were an asset when she served as honorary treasurer of the National Gallery art students’ annual ball at the Palais de Danse, St Kilda on 17 September 1936,[2] with a ‘ballet of "cave men" and modern maidens, two of the leaders of which will be Miss Alannah Coleman and Miss Elizabeth Paterson’ against scenery painted by the student artists.[3][4][5] The following year, at the St Kilda Town Hall, Coleman and Paterson's theme for the ball was Mexican for which ‘huge mural decorations of futuristic Mexican figures painted on immense sheets of brown paper lined the walls.’[6][7][8]
Elizabeth Paterson and Sidney Nolan’ were amongst Alannah's student colleagues and she remained close to them.[9] On 16 December 1938, she performed as witness to their brief marriage and was godmother to their daughter.[10] Other fellow students were Joan James (née Currie), Joan Malcolm, Joy Hester, Albert Tucker, Howard Matthews, Yvonne Lennie (future wife of Arthur Boyd), Phyl Waterhouse and Charles Bush, with all of whom she continued friendships. An archive of approximately 319 Aerogramme letters and 21 postcards that Alannah wrote weekly to Bush over 1971-1989 is held in the State Library of Victoria.[11] She was amongst the founders of the Contemporary Art Society when attending its first meeting with Hester,[12] and Coleman exhibited frequently with the organisation. Coleman was the model for William Dargie’s work shown in a July 1939 exhibition with paintings by P G Moore and Kathleen Howitt (Mrs Dargie), at the Athenaeum gallery.[13]
War years
editWith the outbreak of WW2, in 1940 Coleman figured frequently in the social pages where she was noted for her fashion sense.[14] Her contemporary, poet and broadcaster Alister Kershaw, remembered:
Back in the Thirties and early Forties there were about fifty square yards at the top of Melbourne's Little Collins Street where...the sight of a beard didn't provoke a display of popular indignation. You could even get away with sandals. The bewitching young artist Alannah Coleman could get away with more than that. Her costume was, as a rule, richly international. Once when we were having dinner together, she arrived wearing velvet trousers and a Breton fisherman's striped shirt. A cape like those worn by officers of the Bersaglieri hung to her ankles. An Egyptian fez was perched becomingly on her long blonde hair. A quiver of arrows slung over her shoulders added a Robin Hood or Saxon touch. If she had anything on her feet at all, it can only have been a pair of Roman sandals. Anywhere else in the city, she might have been run in on a charge of disturbing the peace; here, she received no more attention than was due to an exceptionally attractive young woman.[15]
She contributed to the RAN Relief Fund performance at the National Theatre, Melbourne,[16] and joined the official party accompanying commander of the Free French Forces in the Pacific, Commandant Jardin, for the gala first recital of Arise, O France, also at the National Theatre, in 1941.[17]
Splits in the Contemporary Arts Society state branches over the control of it by the Angry Penguins versus the communist adherents started to appear publicly in 1943 but as Haese notes, in the Victorian council John Sinclair, Nolan, Perceval, Harris, Boyd, Allan Henderson and Alannah Coleman (the only woman on the committee), democratic principles prevailed; 'the Angry Penguins controlled rather than dominated the Melbourne branch because until 1945 the communist members maintained constant pressure on their leadership.'[18] Coleman was close to Rupert Bunny when in 1936 he became the Vice-President of the Contemporary Art Society, and they remained friends until his death in 1947.[19]
In 1943, Coleman married a Catholic, the Australian journalist and magazine editor, Des Fennessy who later became Australian Trade Commissioner in Seoul. The marriage was annulled in 1949.[20]
Artist
editColeman's most productive period as a painter of portraits, still-life, and landscapes, was through the war years from 1943, and until 1949. George Bell, reviewing her April 1944, widely publicised,[21] joint show with Joan Malcolm, wrote favourably of their 'dynamic style' and of Coleman's 'great variety of manners of seeing and treating her subject.' He considered that 'a certain weakness In construction will no doubt be overcome in time,' as the 'landscapes have all been treated with a worthy determination to avoid banality'.[22] Bell listed as 'outstanding' portraits by Coleman, James Quinn, Lawson and Matthews, and landscapes by A. Keynes, G, Anderson, Isabel Tweddle in the Victorian Artists' Society Spring show of 1944.[23] She spent a month in Sydney in November that year, working on an upcoming show, and was at Desiderious Orban's opening at Blaxland Gallery along with Douglas Watson and Charles Bush, who were then both A.I.F. war artists.[24] Coleman participated in November 1944 in an exhibition at the South Australian Gallery with a portrait noted as 'excellent' by reviewer Esmond George.[25]
At a group show at the Blue Door Gallery, Melbourne, in November 1945, Colman's still life of shasta daisies was considered by The Herald reviewer a 'choice arrangement of appealing color-tones' from 'a young painter whose progress is definite and continuous',[26] while critic Alan McCulloch considered the Daisies 'worthy of comment' amongst the 'younger artists,'[27] after having remarked that she continued 'to make progress' in a review of a Victorian Artists Society show in September that year.[28] During the war years Coleman worked in the Navy Department, and George Bell noted a 'quiet reserve' in a portrait of a naval officer which was her contribution to the Victorian Artists' Society Autumn show of 1946.[29]
Charles G. Cooper, Classics Professor at the University of Queensland, in his Courier-Mail review of the 1949 joint exhibition of paintings by Alannah Coleman and Arthur Evan Read at Moreton Galleries, Queensland, is dismissive of Read's lack of subtlety, but writes glowingly of Coleman as 'distinctly an original,' praising the 'freshness, vigour and decorative excellence' of her work, and urging audiences to 'relish her piquant blend of ingenuousness and sophistication.'[30] Artist James Wieneke of the Brisbane Telegraph is more sympathetic to Read's depictions of the slums of Sydney, and contrasts those with the 'sensitiveness and a strong feeling of romanticism' in Coleman's work, responding most favourably to the sense of humour in her Siamese Cat which has 'a quality one could definitely describe as feline. This is conveyed through detail such as the cold blue and those long, slender, moving leaves in the background—eloquent of a chilly restlessness.'[31]
Post-war
editAfter the War, in 1946 Coleman managed the Contemporary Art Society exhibition in Sydney[32] and moved into a studio flat at 151 Dowling Street, Woolloomooloo, among other artists including Rod Edwards, and Oliffe Richmond in the downstairs studio.[12][33] Nolan retreated there in 1948 after his estrangement from the Reeds at Heidi and before joining Cynthia Reed.[10] At Darling Street, Coleman met Frank Mitchell and Robert Henry for whom she modelled their first fashion collection in 1949.[34][35][36] Coleman also researched the 1865 period at the Mitchell Library for her costume designs for the film Robbery Under Arms.[37] She held her first solo show, works made in Sydney, at the Myer Art Gallery in Melbourne in November 1946,[37] the event unfortunatley coinciding with the death of Alannah's mother Irene.[38] Over December 1949 she worked on an entry for the Archibald Prize.[39]
Stalking and an attempt on her life in June 1950 by a jealous lover precipitated her departure for Europe on the SS Ranchi.[40] On an adventurous, low-budget return visit with Sheila Boyle to Europe that included Lapland,[41] they hitched a lift with Sydney-born English dental surgeon Denis Sharman whom Coleman soon quietly married in 1951,[42] but not before she had been obliged to find employment in the Royal Box at Mills Brothers Circus, and in a Bond Street jewellery store.[43] The couple had twins Alister and Simone in 1953, and on the babies' first birthday the family moved from their central London apartment in Birdcage Walk overlooking St James's Park,[42] and which Coleman had decorated herself,[44][45] into 'Cherry Tree Cottage' in Langford Close, St. John's Wood, next door to Mark Hambourg.[46] Alannah and Denis separated in 1957.[1]
London
editColeman, after her relocation to London, established in 1959 an art dealership from her apartment, the Alannah Coleman Gallery[47] in Putney where she promoted such expatriate Australian artists as Arthur Boyd, Tony Underhill, Oliffe Richmond, Tony Underhill and Louis James by inviting clients to see the work in the domestic setting.[48] Sidney Nolan and Cynthia lived nearby and she continued to sell his work. Barbara Blackman remembered her as catlike (and she was, with Sunday Reed,[49] a cat lover):[50] ‘She slinks about in Royal circles, she is smelling out the buyer, she will purr up to him and whisper the right names’.[51] She was conscientious; holding long parties to introduce artists to buyers; attending several previews in the evenings; advising clients in their own homes on the appropriate hanging of their purchases.[52]
Coleman was active in establishing the Australian Artists' Association (AAA) in London, to foster connections between expatriate Australian artists and the British art world. Contemporary Australian painting achieved international status due to a number of significant exhibitions that took place in Britain between 1953 and 1964. With interest increasing, on 2 June 1961, Recent Australian Painting was launched at the Whitechapel Gallery. Then, following the Tate Gallery's 24 January–3 March 1963 exhibition Australian Painting: Colonial, Impressionist, Contemporary—the largest such survey in the UK since 1923, but criticised[53] for its merely token inclusion of younger artists' work—Coleman had organised another; Australian Painting and Sculpture in Europe Today at New Metropole Arts Centre in Folkestone, Kent which Sir Kenneth Clark opened on 19 April 1963, lauding it as ‘the most impressive group show of Australian art ever in Britain'.[54]
Peter Sheldon-Williams (a.k.a. 'A Oskar' whose exhibition Coleman reviewed in 1986)[55] writing on how 'An Australian Row Comes To Britain' in The Contemporary Review of February 1963 positions Australian Painting and Sculpture in Europe Today as a representation of the Australian avant-garde, against the conservatism of Australian Painting: Colonial, Impressionist, Contemporary which imposed the reactionary aesthetic tastes of Robert Menzies, who had founded the ill-fated Australian Academy of Art (1937-1947), on an exhibition meant to showcase the progress of Australian art. Sheldon-Williams compares Menzies with Hitler and Khrushchev in regard to despotic fear of 'change, reform and new ideas' to conclude that 'the Austrahan Exhibition at the Tate is not giving us the whole picture, is not in fact a 'true cross-section of what modem Australian Art is achieving,' before detailing Coleman's bona fides and her achievement in the Folkestone alternative:
[Coleman's] earliest fame came when she was a practising artist herself first a Melbourne and later in Sydney. Miss Coleman was a familiar figure in those days in the art colones of both these centres. She was present at the first inaugural meeting of the Contemporary Art Society of Australia when Albert Tucker was president. She made herself responsible for organizing important early exhibitions of Australan Modern Art including the big show of Danila Vassilieff, the Russian modern artist who settled in Australia and became the centre of one "establishment" storm after another. Miss Coleman was a close friend of many of the young painters of those days, including Sidney Nolan and Albert Tucker. Her association with them and others gave her keen insight into what was going on in the Australian cultural front. Now, Miss Coleman is in London. She has established herself in a magnificent salon where she is surrounded by the works of modern Australian painters and sculptors. Her address in Putney is a cultural shopwindow for the Antipodes. Nearly all Australian artists who have been in Britain or who have settled in this country have examples of their œuvre there. The first fully-public display of Miss Coleman's "collection" is being shown in the galleries of the New Metropole Art Centre in Folkestone.[56]
Coleman organised an extension of the show with work by Boyd, Nolan, Blackman, Len French, Brett Whiteley and William Delafield-Cook at the Stadel’sches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt-am-Main, opening on 4 July 1963.[57] She was appointed commissioner general to the Paris Biennale for Young Painters in 1963 and was hired as director at Heal's Gallery in Tottenham Court Road, London,[47] where she showed both Australian and British artists, and that year married her third husband, John Newell. They divorced in 1968, the marriage strained by the demands of her co-directing the Ewan Phillips gallery in Maddox Street, Mayfair[1] and directing Heal's Gallery.[58]
Bonython Gallery
editIn early 1970, Albert Tucker, whom Coleman had represented, suggested to Kim Bonython that she should manage shows at his eponymous gallery in Sydney.[59] When she arrived, Mollie Lyons reported in the Women's Weekly that the 'art world turned up in full force this week at the Bonython Gallery to welcome home Alannah Coleman after 19 years overseas'.[60] The Bulletin interviewed her for its February issue and recorded how during her time in London, she had witnessed the growing international recognition and value of Australian art in the market. She said that Australian paintings, once absent from major auction houses like Christie's and Sotheby's, were now fetching significant prices, and there was increasing interest in Australian colonial art particularly among Australian collectors in the UK. Of the broader art market, Coleman commented on the high prices commanded by artists like Francis Bacon and the scarcity of works by Picasso and Jackson Pollock.[61]
A portrait by Charles Bush of Coleman surrounded by framed works and folios of drawings was a finalist in the 1970 Archibald Prize,[62][63] and Alannah's weekly letters to Bush date from 1971.[11]
On assuming the position, she oversaw solo shows by Brett Whiteley (June–July 1970) and Ken Reinhard (July–August 1970) which had already been arranged, though she herself curated paintings by Victor Vasarely which she had obtained through contacts in Paris for a sell-out show, and staged a large survey of about 30 Australian modernists;[64] Australian Irresistibles 1930–1970, over August–September 1970. Artist and reviewer Elwyn Lynn thought it 'a most commendable survey even in a city bereft of them,' and discerned an Australian modulation, or even rejection, of French 'ease' in the way:
...Godfrey Miller romanticises Jacques Villon in a shadowed circle, Paul Haefliger’s Picassoid-Braque piece is invaded by German Expressionism; [Anthony] Underhill lacks French crispness; Passmore gives his Cezannesque landscape a lowering, romantic sky; Fullbrook softens his cubist shapes in a fleeting landscape with a romantic mist, and even Fairweather, in his fine Gamelan...inclines to a fugitive fuzziness that is foreign to its partly French origins.[65]
The Bonython appointment lasted only a year, due to disagreements over the financial viability of the large gallery, which closed after its losses, in 1976, and the less formal openings and events that Coleman found contrary to European conventions.
Return to England
editReturning to the UK, Coleman organised shows for the Qantas gallery and the New South Wales House gallery in London,[66] continued to be recognised and consulted for her expertise on Australian artists who worked and showed in Britain,[67][48] and wrote occasional articles on contemporary art and artists for various publications in London and Australia. She was made a member, by invitation, of the International Association of Art Critics.
Exhibitions
edit- 1944, from 4 April: paintings by Alannah Coleman and Joan Malcolm, opened by actor Claude Flemming at Tye's Velasquez Galleries 100 Bourke Street, Melbourne[68][69]
- 1944, September: Victorian Artists' Society Spring Show[23]
- 1945, 21–31 August Contemporary Art Society Exhibition with artists: Lawrence Adolphus, Gordon Andrews, Jean Bellette, Bill Cantwell, Edward Collings, Mary Curtis, Peter Dodd, O. Edwards, L. Elbourne, Cedric Flower, Yvonne Francort, Bernard Hesling, Avis Higgs, N. Ivangine, Margot Kater, Herbert Kemble, M. Kimlin, Amie Kingston, V. Kinsky, Alicia Lee, Ruth Levy, Margo Lewers, Raymond Lindsay, Herbert McClintock, Alick McKenzie, Eleanor Martin, Jesse Martin, Frank Medworth, Brian Midlane, Hal Missingham, Alistair Morrison, Justin O'Brien, Desiderius Orban, Ruth Pasco, M.D. Paxton, Carl Plate, Freda Robertshaw, Roderick Shaw, Charles Swain, E. Wall, Douglas Watson, Mary Webb, Robert Williamson, Jocelyn Zander, Elizabeth Martin, W.J. Bergner, Arthur Boyd, Mary Boyd, Dorothy Braund, Noel Counihan, K. Friedberger, J.M. Gill, David Gough, Judy Hunter, J.K. Lavett, Y. Lenne, M. Cockburn Mercer, Helen Noble, Sidney Nolan, V.G. O'Connor, Roy Opie, Albert Reid, B.R. Sargent, Florence Thompson, Danila Vassilieff, Neville W. Bunning, Gwendolin Grant, Joy Hester, V. Adolfsson, Mary Harris, J. Hick, S. Keene, L. Kohlhagen, E. Milston, Clifton Pugh, D. Roberts, Tasman Fehlberg. Myer Gallery, Melbourne.[70]
- 1945, September: Victorian Artists' Society Spring Show[28]
- 1945, November: Group show at The Blue Door Gallery, 17 George Pde., off 113 Collins St., Melbourne[27][26]
- 1946, February: Group show including George Bell. Lina Bryans. Madge Freeman, Louise Thomas. Ian Bow and Francis Roy Thompson, The Blue Door Gallery, 17 George Pde., off 113 Collins St., Melbourne[71]
- 1946, October: Past Students of the National Gallery group show with Charles Bush, Howard Matthews, H. A. Barnes, Lindsay Edwards, Kathleen Barnes, Grahame King, Edward Heffernan, Laurence Phillips, Nornie Gude, P. Gare, G.Browning, L. Pendlebury, Phyl Waterhouse, and J. Frawley. Myer's Art Gallery, 6th floor, Bourke Street Store, Melbourne[72][73][14]
- 1946, April: Victorian Artists' Society autumn salon.[29]
- 1946, November: first solo show, of works made at Potts Point and Kings Cross, Sydney, Myer's Art Gallery, 6th floor, Bourke Street Store, Melbourne[37]
- 1949, from 9 May: Group exhibition of 60 members of the Society of Artists, David Jones gallery, 7th floor (Mezzanine), Elizabeth Street, Sydney[74]
- 1949, 21 June–1 July: An exhibition of paintings by Alannah Coleman and Arthur Evan Read, Moreton Galleries, 5 Edward Street, Brisbane, Queensland,[75]
- 1949, September: group exhibition of floral paintings, David Jones gallery, 7th floor (Mezzanine), Elizabeth Street, Sydney[76]
- 1949, November, 5–13: Fern Tree Gully Arts Society, sixth annual exhibition, including Edith Alsop, Frank C Andrew, Len Annois, Edward Borovansky, Susan Boyd, Charles Bush, Daisy Campbell, Donald F. Campbell, Maie Casey, Ronald Center, A. Clayfield, Alannah Coleman, W.G. Collins, Eugene Cooper, Margaret Dickinson, Russell Drysdale, Alfred Dunstan, John Farmer, Harold A. Fleming, Eric L. Frazer, Norah Gurdon, Harry Harrison, Edward Heffernan, H.F. Hill, Arnold Holst, Marshall Hughes, Graeme Inson, Kenneth Jack, James R. Haughton, Margaret Joske, Frank Kane, Gavin Kleinert, Mary Macqueen, Max Middleton, John Morrissey, George Neville, Barbara Newman, Max Newton, Helen Ogilvie, Valerie O'Neill, Dick Ovenden, Esther Paterson, Gustav Pillig, M. Rankin, R.W. Rowed, John Rowell, Eugenie B. Rowell, Kenneth Rowell, Dora Serle, Frank Sherrin, Jeannettie Sheldon, Arnold Shore, Douglas Smart, Eric Smith, Peter Purves Smith, Audrey Snell, Charles Swancott, Eveline Syme, Florence Tame, Ken Thompson, Roma Thompson, Noel Thorpe, Kit Turner, Phyl Waterhouse, Percy Watson, Julius Wentcher, Charles Wheeler, Betty Buck, William Constable.[77]
Publications
edit- Coleman, A. (1955) dust-jacket illustration for Kershaw, Alister (1955), Murder in France, Constable, retrieved 16 November 2024
- Coleman, Alannah (1971–1989). "Letters to Charles Bush : 1971-1989". State Library of Victoria. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- –––––––– (1981) ‘Opera: London tniumph for Nolan’, The Bulletin, Sydney, 3 November 1981, p. 72
- –––––––– (1985). review of Images of Sydney, 1890–1950. Arts Review.[78]
- –––––––– (1986) A. Oscar : an exhibition of paintings (Coleman is writer of introduction), Miguel Solá (Writer of added text), Windsor Arts Centre. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Arts Centre (Windsor, USA), 21 Oct. - 7 Nov. 1986[55]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Pierse, Simon (2022). Alannah Coleman : a life in art. North Melbourne, Victoria: Arden. ISBN 9781922669438.
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- ^ a b c "One-Woman Show". The Sun News-pictorial. No. 7528. Victoria, Australia. 11 November 1946. p. 6. Retrieved 16 November 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
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- ^ "Sydney artist's decor called 'sensational'". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XII, no. 43. New South Wales, Australia. 16 September 1951. p. 37. Retrieved 16 November 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
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- ^ a b McCulloch, Alan; McCulloch, Susan; McCulloch, Emily (2006). The New McCulloch's Encyclopedia of Australian art (4th ed.). Fitzroy, Vic: Aus Art Editions in association with The Miegunyah Press. p. 333. ISBN 978-0-522-85317-9.
- ^ a b Gaze, Delia (1997), Dictionary of women artists, London Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, p. 129, ISBN 978-1-884964-21-3
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- ^ Blackman, Barbara; Wright, Judith, 1915-2000; Cosgrove, Bryony (2007), Portrait of a friendship : the letters of Barbara Blackman and Judith Wright 1950-2000, Miegunyah Press, p. 82, ISBN 978-0-522-85355-1
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{{citation}}
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