SYDNEY.- The Art Gallery of New South Wales is presenting Brett Whiteley: drawing is everything, the first major museum exhibition to focus on the central place of drawing in Whiteleys work.
The drawings in this exhibition have rarely been seen. They range from Whiteleys early images of Sydney and Europe and his great abstracts that brought him international fame in the 1960s, to the lyrical landscapes, portraits, interiors and nudes that established him as one of the most prominent and well-loved Australian artists of the 20th century. Key paintings and sculptures are also showcased, underpinning the importance of drawing to Whiteleys broader artistic practice.
Art Gallery of NSW director Dr Michael Brand said the exhibition celebrates Whiteleys creative energy and masterful command of the drawn line.
Drawing lay at the heart of Brett Whiteleys artistic endeavours; whether the final expression was a work on paper, a painting, a sculpture or printmaking, the seed was drawing.
Drawing is everything traces that foundation as it evolved across Whiteleys career and encountered a multitude of influences and inspirations. It also affirms the Gallerys belief in the importance of drawing across the broader history of art, Dr Brand added.
Exhibition curator Anne Ryan has brought together 116 works for the exhibition from the Brett Whiteley Studio collection and the Art Gallery of NSW collection as well as loans from private and public collections across Australia.
Drawing is everything is unmistakably Whiteley; while his unique visual language of sinuous line and bravura flourish is centre stage in major drawings, we also see a quieter, more thoughtful side of the artist in intimate drawings of a modest scale. The audience is taken on a journey from his early studies in London through the decades via the cities, landscapes and people that sustained his imagination and left their mark on his work, Ryan said.
Whiteley embraced drawing with gusto. His drawings served as laboratories for ideas, meditative responses to beauty in nature or the city, or as the exuberant and confident culmination of hours of working on a theme. All sing of the sheer pleasure of their evocation in pencil or ink or charcoal on paper, Ryan added.
In the exhibition catalogue for his 1985 solo exhibition at Robin Gibson Gallery Brett Whiteley Drawings 1960 1985, Brett Whiteley wrote: Drawing is a completely un-rehearsable and unrepeatable visual truth. The purpose of drawing is to make freshness permanent
Some drawings are made in order for me to see something, some are made in order for me to show something, some are made to show off
It is better to have drawn and lost than never to have drawn at all.
An audio guide for Brett Whiteley: drawing is everything has been produced with Anne Ryan in conversation with Wendy Whiteley. Together, they reflect on the role of drawing in Whiteleys practice as well as bringing to life the different subjects, locations and inspirations that span his career.
Drawing is where Brett started. It was his foundation. His drawings were thought bubbles. In many ways every drawing was a self-portrait regardless of the actual subject matter. Each of his drawings holds an element of Brett, Wendy Whiteley said.
In Majorca in 1967 Robert Graves explained the meaning of genius to me and Brett as 98% lead, 2% mercury. The 2% mercury is the artistic brilliance, the genius and thats what I want people to understand about artists who have an effortlessness in their drawing.
Its not that mad idea that people have that you can return to the innocence of a child. You cant go back there, but you can learn the ease of doing something like that through a lot of hard work. Thats the point, thats the moment thats the 2% mercury. Thats what is in Bretts drawings, Wendy Whiteley added.