“To Sing of death and
disaster does not make for popularity, I’m afraid.
But it is my song and I’ve got to sing it.”
Albert Tucker
But it is my song and I’ve got to sing it.”
Albert Tucker
The Australian artist Albert Tucker
was 14 1/2 when he left school and got a job as a house painter to help support
his family. It was the start of the depression and for this working class
family trying to live a middle class life style all hands were required to keep
the creditors at bay.
It wasn’t a difficult decision for the young Tucker who considered
a formal education irrelevant for his chosen life’s work. As told he told the Australian
Biography project’s Robin Hughes about his first day of schooling “What
am I doing here? I don't want to learn all this rubbish. It's nothing to do
with me. I'm going to be an artist.”
And that five
year olds prophetic statement became a reality. Tucker is considered to be one
of Australia’s foremost artists of the 20th Century. He was an important
proponent of the introduction of modernism into Australian art as well as a
highly respect portraitist.
Painting in an
expressive style influenced by European modernists like Picasso, Matisse and
Dali, Tucker’s works were also influence by the shattered minds and bodies of the
returning soldiers from the Second World War he encountered at the
Heidelberg Military Hospital. Images, which haunted his non-portrait painting
for the rest of his life and about which he said “I had by nose rubbed in it with all those events in the army,
the hospital, and then the post-war period when I went to Japan and to Europe.
Prior to leaving
for Europe Tucker was forced to work in series of jobs he detested because “everything
I did [paintings] everyone thought I was out of my mind, or took no notice of
it,” he said. After the failure of his marriage Tucker headed overseas stating,
tongue in cheek, to a local newspaper “Well I'm a refugee from Australian
culture.”
After a decade in
Europe, Tucker spent two years in America. The purchase of two of his works by
New York’s Museum of Modern Art provided the recognition necessary for successful
exhibitions upon his return to Australia.
Along with his
contemporaries Sydney Nolan
and Russell Drysdale
he was instrumental in putting Australian art on the international map. But
through it all Tucker painted for himself, as he has said “There's only one
audience I'm interested in. If he's satisfied that's the beginning and end of
it as far as I'm concerned. And if other people then like it, well that's just
a bonus.”
The exhibition
Albert Tucker: The Truth in Masquerade is currently on show
at Melbourne’s Heide Museum of Modern Art until
the 16th of August.
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