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City Bushmen: The Heidelberg School and the rural mythology by Leigh Astbury

by
December 1985–January 1986, no. 77

City Bushmen: The Heidelberg School and the rural mythology by Leigh Astbury

Oxford University Press, 216 pp., $45 hb

City Bushmen: The Heidelberg School and the rural mythology by Leigh Astbury

by
December 1985–January 1986, no. 77

That Australia’s first national school of painters were ‘city bushmen’ is well documented. Tom Roberts began his career as a photographer in Collingwood, Frederick McCubbin in the family’s West Melbourne bakery and Arthur Streeton as an apprentice lithographer. Stories about their plein air painting excursions to Box Hill, Mentone, and Eaglemont are often told. The useful art historical label ‘The Heidelberg School’ first seems to have been used by a local journalist reviewing Streeton’s and Walter Withers’ work done chiefly in this attractive suburb where, with others of like inclination, they have established a summer congregation for out-of-door painting (The Australasian Critic,  l July 1891). Leigh Astbury, however, defines his use of the term Heidelberg School ‘in its current broader sense, that is, artists of a more ‘progressive tendency working in Melbourne and Sydney in the 1880s and 1890s’.

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