Dorrit Black,
Eveline Syme and Ethel Spowers - three female artists who transformed
Australian Modernism
Though it was only
founded in 1925, the reputation of the Grosvenor School of Modern Art was such
that it rapidly became known as an international centre of printmaking during
the late 1920s and 1930s. Among the foreign artists who studied there
were three individuals who were to play a major role in the development of
Australian modernism. These women – Dorrit Black, Ethel Spowers and Eveline
Syme – all had the financial security and freedom to travel overseas and
explore beyond the confines of the Australian art scene. Already well-trained,
established artists before they studied under the influential lecturer and
linocut pioneer Claude Flight, the trio were drawn to the School by his
reputation for forward-thinking, egalitarian teachings.
Unusually, all three artists came from
families that worked in newspapers, suggesting they might have had a greater
appreciation for the printing process. While each of them were dramatically
influenced by Flight’s geometric rhythms, their linocuts departed from those of
their European peers, frequently focusing on pastoral scenes using relaxed,
organic lines, as opposed to the more mechanised, compressed patterns found in
Flight’s linocuts and those of his pupils like Lill Tschudi. While Dorrit Black
became the most significant of the three, each of these artists played an
important role in the wider acceptance of modernist art in Australia, through
their championing of the linocut.
Dorrit Black
Dorrit Black arrived in London in September
1927 and began taking classes at the Grosvenor School shortly after, continuing
her formal studies there until December. Immediately developing a rapport with
Flight, she fondly noted that ‘one feels instantly at one’s ease with him’.
Black’s flair for absorbing new ideas and techniques can be seen in the
contrast between the more traditional pictorial prints she was creating prior
to her arrival and the exhilarating abstraction of Music (pictured below).
Inspired by a visit to London’s newly opened
Dominion Jazz Club in 1927, its pared down elements and bold colours emphasise
the joyful abandon of four dancers losing themselves in the music. Vibrating
with the energy of the times, this was one of the artworks selected to be shown
at the first Linocut exhibition in 1929 and reflects its creator’s excitement
at being right at the start of a new artistic journey.
Black subsequently went on to study in Paris
with André Lhote, but she remained firm friends with Flight: he acted as
Black’s unofficial art dealer in London, while she did much to popularise his
favoured medium in her home country. In 1931 she became the first woman in
Australia to run a gallery after opening the Modern Art Centre in Sydney. In
many ways resembling the Grosvenor School, it was the country’s first teaching
and exhibiting space for modernism. Until her untimely death in 1951, Black
continued to push the boundaries of printmaking, achieving broader success
despite the scorn which she often faced from a conservative art establishment.
Eveline Syme
The Melbourne artist Eveline Syme discovered
Claude Flight’s innovative work by chance after finding a copy of his
ground-breaking book, Lino-Cuts. She later declared: ‘I had seen nothing more
vital and essentially modern in the best sense of the word than the
reproductions in this book.’ Studying at the Grosvenor School in 1929, she also
went on to learn from Lhote – blending Flight’s methods with the latter’s
preference for classical geometric formula in elegant landscapes like Outskirts
of Siena (pictured below).
Like Dorrit Black, Syme was committed to
furthering the role of women and art in society, using progressive ideas and
methods learned from Flight and Lhote to break through the conservative
barriers of the art establishment in Australia. She founded a women’s
residential college at the University of Melbourne and produced distinctive
colour linocuts into the late 1950s.
Ethel Spowers
A close friend of Eveline Syme, Ethel Spowers
produced colour woodcuts and later turned to Japanese woodblock printing before
studying with Flight in 1928 and again in 1931. She experienced artistic
success in her lifetime – her linocuts were purchased by institutions including
the British Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Gallery of
Victoria.
The urban scene depicted in Wet Afternoon is
typical of the Grosvenor School – a faceless London crowd sheltering under
umbrellas, evoked through the signature rhythmic patterns which Flight
instilled in his students. However, in contrast to the sense of alienation
evident in the linocuts of artists like Cyril Power, Spowers’ subject matter is
consistently affirming, expressing the joy that she experienced through
observing everyday physical activities such as children at play. In this way
her art provided a welcome counterweight to the themes of estrangement and
panic present in so many other depictions of urban life in the interwar years.
Tom Short, Marketing Officer
You can see many more prints by Dorrit Black,
Eveline Syme and Ethel Spowers in our current exhibition Cutting Edge:
Modernist British Printmaking. Now entering its final weeks, it closes 8
September 2019.
https://dulwichpicturegallery.org.uk/about/news-blog/2019/august/cutting-edge-the-australian-artists/?utm_source=wordfly&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=CuttingEdgeFinalWeeks&utm_content=version_A&sourceNumber=
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