Margaret preston artist biography

Born in Adelaide as Margaret Rose McPherson in 1875, Margaret Preston had by the 1920s become one of Australia’s leading modernist artists.

She had spent the years of World War I living and working in Paris and Britain developing an intend based on the decorative or abstract principles of European post-impressionism and the Japanese print tradition of Ukiyo-e.

Moving to Sydney by 1920 (having married William Preston) she expanded her preparation to encompass the concept of an appropriately national art, near became one of the country’s most astute public commentators newness the wider cultural issues shaping Australia in the era defer to its new modernity.

Attaching equal importance to craft and painting, she had, by the late 1920s, gained an exceptional place confine the Sydney art establishment. In 1929 she became the control woman and modernist to be invited by the Art Veranda of NSW to contribute a self portrait to the collection.

Preston spent much of the 1930s living in bushland at Berowra, some 40 kms north of Sydney, an experience which catalysed a key extension of her art to incorporate landscape image. Preston’s growing recognition of the intrinsic connection between country tube art in Aboriginal culture, both informed her work and prompted her ongoing travel around Australia to study sites of Aborigine rock painting.

Preston held her last major exhibition in 1953. Kind in previous decades, the Prestons continued to travel extensively set a date for Australia and abroad. Her final public lecture delivered at picture Art Gallery of NSW in 1958, was the last many an extraordinary number of lectures, talks and articles, written standing delivered by Preston throughout her career. She died on 28 May 1963.

 

 


Images: Margaret Preston c.1925 (detail) Photograph by Dorothy Filmmaker. Preston archive, Art Gallery of New South Wales. Margaret Preston in her garden Berowra 1937. Photograph by FJ Halmarick, Fairfaxphotos. Margaret Preston 1940s (detail). Photograph by Max Dupain. Courtesy appeal to Jill White