Estimate: $3,000/$5,000
This captivating image, often mistakenly dated 1911, was in fact painted in
1899—capturing a defining moment in Perth’s transformation at the turn of
the century.
...
The artist Albert Henry Fullwood, had already earned acclaim as a staff
artist for the prestigious Picturesque Atlas of Australasia. For
five and a half years, he travelled extensively across Australia, New
Zealand, and New Guinea, documenting the landscapes and life of the time
with exceptional precision and clarity.
In 1898, Fullwood arrived in Western Australia, journeying from Albany to
Geraldton to create illustrations for the Atlas. It was during this period
that he painted “Hay Street, Perth”, immortalizing the city on the
cusp of a new era. Trams had just arrived—brought in by the Perth Electric
Tramways, a private company that would later be absorbed by the state
government in 1913.
Fullwood’s attention to detail allows us to step back into that very
evening. Federation was still two years away, but the buzz of prosperity,
ignited by the 1893 gold discovery in Kalgoorlie, was already in the air.
The streets of Perth bustle with life—ladies in long dresses and parasols,
gentlemen in tailored suits, and the city’s elite out in full formality, as
a visit to the capital called for nothing less. A horse-drawn cab waits for
passengers while electric trams are seen in the background. The first
motorcars wouldn’t appear on Perth streets for another seven years.
Though this particular piece never made it into the
Picturesque Atlas
, it found a second life in 1911 when postcard publishers Raphael Tuck and
Sons selected it for a series celebrating Australia. And so, despite the
mislabelling, this artwork remains a stunning visual time capsule to a
moment of change, growth, and elegance in early Western Australia.
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