Estimate: $2,500/$3,500
In June 1935, Robert Johnson held a solo exhibition at the West Australian
Newspaper House Gallery in Perth. Forty-eight works were displayed, and the
organiser, John Brackenreg, conducted a plebiscite—a people’s choice
vote—throughout the duration of the show. Brackenreg declared,
“The exhibition has been an unqualified success. Exceptional interest
has been shown throughout the three weeks the pictures have been shown
in Perth.”
...
The exhibition was further enhanced by regular newspaper reports detailing
the rankings of individual works as votes were tallied. Over 5,000 votes
were cast, with the most popular piece being “Pearl of Pittwater”,
which is now part of the collection at the Art Gallery of Western
Australia—a gift from Mrs. E. H. Barker in 1953.
“The Meadows, Oberon” was also included in the exhibition, ranking
fifteenth among the works on display.
The well-known watercolourist and art critic Harold Herbert described
Johnson as an honest plein air painter, adhering to the principles laid
down by Streeton, Roberts, Ashton, and others, working in the true spirit
of Impressionism.
Robert Johnson was born in Auckland in 1890 and arrived in Australia in
1921. He studied at the Elam School of Art in Auckland under Edward
Fristrom and Archibald Nicoll. Soon after his arrival in Australia, he
found immediate success with local art patrons and was quickly regarded as
a promising contemporary artist, ranking highly among Australia's landscape
painters.
Years earlier, while serving as a New Zealand artilleryman aboard a
troopship in Fremantle en route to the Great War, Johnson resolved to
return to Western Australia to paint the landscape. Though he exhibited
regularly in Perth, it wasn’t until 1937 that he was able to fulfil that
pledge. He returned to the state, disembarking at Albany, and travelled by
caravan with John Brackenreg and Arthur Wakefield Bassett through the South
West coastal districts, painting and enjoying each other’s company. As an
artist, he was particularly struck by the intensity of the Western
Australian light.
Johnson won several prizes, including the Queen’s Coronation Medal in 1953.
His work is represented in the collections of all Australian State
Galleries. In 1936, he was commissioned by the Australian Federal
Government to paint a view of Canberra as a gift to the New Zealand
government.
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