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This is a short book for children. It is set in Australia and is a poem all about the adventure one night of some rabbits. It is beautifully illustrated by woodcuts made by the author and Geraldine Read who is also listed as one of the authors.
Imprint: Sign of the Rabbit (1905). ARCHIVAL REPRINT: LIMITED EDITION. Privately printed; vellum acabado. Coloured illustrations.
This book of colour wood cuts thought to be the first colour woodcuts produced in Australia. It was entirely hand-made by the artists in Violet Teague's Collins Street studio, with the images printed from carved woodblocks in the Japanese manner, where the ink is brushed directly onto the block, resulting in delicate gradations of tone. The Japanese influence continues in the manner in which the book is bound with a simple green silk ribbon, as well as the text, written by Violet Teague in short sharp sentences reminiscent of Haiku poetry.
Battarbee and Namatjira is the biography of two artists Rex Battarbee and Albert Namatjira, one white Australian from Warrnambool in Victoria, the other Aboriginal, of the Arrernte people, from the Hermannsburg Mission south of Alice Springs. From their first encounters in the early 1930s, when Battarbee introduced Namatjira to the techniques of water-colour painting, through the period of Namatjira’s popularity as a painter, to the tragic circumstances leading to his death in 1959, their close relationship was to have a decisive impact on Australian art. This biography, illustrated with photographs, makes extensive use of Battarbee’s diaries for the first time, to throw new light on Namatjira’s life, and to bring Battarbee, who has been largely ignored by biographers, back into focus. Some of its findings will be controversial. By moving between the artists and their backgrounds, and looking closely at the nature of their friendship, Edmond is able to portray the personal and social complexities the two men faced, while at the same time illuminating larger cultural themes – the treatment of the Arrernte and Indigenous people generally, the influence of the Lutheran church, the development of anthropology, and the evolution of Australian art.
An exhibition publication featuring curatorial essays and works from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York