- description
- Delivery Information
Charles Blackman (1928-2018) Original Limited Edition Signed Etching 'The Journey' 39cm x 49cm
Charles Blackman (1928-2018), a large framed limited edition coloured etching and aquatint printed on 100% cotton French 300 grams paper by one of Australia's most beloved and collectable artists. Titled 'The Journey', Circa 1998, the artwork is reminiscent of dreamscapes from the ‘Alice in Wonderland’ from the original series (not series II). This piece has been beautifully framed in an acid-free white mat board with a thick grey wood grain frame and gold inlay. The artwork has been signed lower right margin "Charles Blackman" with printers blindstamp 'JW', titled lower centre margin 'The Journey' and editioned 20 of 60 lower left margin and in excellent condition. An absolutely quality Blackman, priced to sell.
Dimensions
Image size: 39cm x 49cm
Frame size: 67cm x 80cm x 2.5cm
Bio
Charles Raymond Blackman OBE (12 August 1928 – 20 August 2018)[1] was an Australian painter, noted for the Schoolgirl, Avonsleigh and Alice in Wonderland series of the 1950s. He was a member of the Antipodeans, a group of Melbourne painters that also included Arthur Boyd, David Boyd, John Brack, Robert Dickerson, John Perceval, and Clifton Pugh. He was married for 27 years to author, essayist, poet, librettist and patron of the arts Barbara Blackman. Charles Blackman is one of the most celebrated Australian figurative artists of the 20th century. An excellent draughtsman as well as a painter, he created imagery – often in series – based on personal, literary and musical themes. He came to prominence after the Second World War as one of the so-called ‘Heide circle’ of artists and was also a founding member of The Antipodeans art movement. Born in Sydney, Blackman grew up in Queensland before leaving school aged 13 and returning to Sydney to work as an illustrator for the Sydney Sun newspaper. Predominantly self-taught, he attended night classes at East Sydney Technical College, now the National Art School, from 1943 to 1946.
In 1951 Blackman moved to Melbourne and became one of the group of artists, which included Sidney Nolan, Albert Tucker and Joy Hester, centred at Heide, the home of art patrons John and Sunday Reed, in the city’s outer suburbs. It was during his first year in Melbourne that he discovered the bayside suburb of St Kilda, where he would travel by tram to swim, draw and visit Luna Park. The drawings, including Luna Park with Griffin light, led to a series of paintings on the same theme. Blackman’s first major series, ‘Schoolgirls’, created between 1952 and 1955, has long captured the public imagination. In it, he painted the schoolgirl figure, often depicted in eerily empty streetscapes, as a symbolic embodiment of urban loneliness and alienation.
The painting Girl dreaming and the drawing Schoolgirls with a dog – both in the Art Gallery of NSW collection – form part of this quintessential series. Further acclaim followed with his ‘Alice’ series, based on Lewis Carroll’s book Alice in Wonderland, introduced to him by his then wife Barbara Blackman, who served as the model for Alice in these works. Produced from 1956 to 1957, the series includes more than 40 paintings of vivid and surreal imagination. In 1959, Blackman was one of seven figurative artists, including Arthur Boyd, David Boyd, John Brack, Robert Dickerson, John Perceval and Clifton Pugh, who signed the ‘Antipodean manifesto’, drafted by Bernard Smith, which outlined their objections to abstract art, which they felt was becoming too prominent in Australia. In 1960,
Blackman received the Helena Rubenstein Travelling Scholarship and moved to London for six years, where he exhibited at the Whitechapel Gallery and the Tate Gallery. In 1970 he was awarded a Cité des Artes scholarship and spent a year in Paris, a city he found inspiring and would return to often in later years.
Delivery Information
Australia
Shipping is based on size and weight. We have divided
shipping into under 7kg (Free), 7-15kg based on weight and size, +15kg
based on weight and size. We do not charge extra fees for shipping.
Purely what it costs us.
Standard Shipping
- Free Shipping up to 7kg
- Over 7kg Shipping Fee is based on location and weight
- Delivery time is 3-7 workdays after dispatch
Express Shipping
- Express Shipping Fee up to 7kg $14.95
- Over 7kg Shipping Fee is based on location and weight
- Delivery time is 2-5 workdays after dispatch
New Zealand
- Standard Free Shipping up to 7kg
- Over 7kg Shipping Fee is based on location and weight
- Delivery time is 7-10 Working Days
If you are interested in shipping products to another country, please contact us: info@artmarkets.com.au We will return a quote within 24 hours.
Terms and Conditions:
After receiving an international order, we will ship out the parcel within 1-2 business days and will send the tracking number to provided
email.
Our shipping partners are:
- Australia Post for orders within Australia
- DHL for international orders
- ArtMarkets.com.au does not refund international shipping costs and reserves the rights to deduct any return costs incurred from the total
return amount for orders that are refused at customs. - ArtMarkets.com.au are legally required to declare the full dollar value paid on the international shipments and must include an invoice for customs if they require it.
If you have any inquiries regarding delivery, please contact us.