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'Gallery Notes' by Michael Desmond

by
February 2004, no. 258

'Gallery Notes' by Michael Desmond

by
February 2004, no. 258

In 1985 Howard Taylor was the first artist to be awarded the Australia Council’s Emeritus Award for senior artists. The same year, he was honoured with a retrospective by the Art Gallery of Western Australia, curated by Gary Dufour, who is also responsible for the current exhibition, Howard Taylor: Phenomena. Recognised for his very successful career in Perth, Taylor has nonetheless remained a local hero, virtually unknown in the eastern states.

Many people’s introduction to Taylor’s work came during the exhibition Phenomena: New Painting in Australia at the Art Gallery of New South Wales and Melbourne’s Ian Potter Gallery in 2001, the year of Taylor’s death, aged eighty-three. There, curator Michael Wardell placed Taylor’s works as the altarpiece in a chapel of painting that reified an abstracted art sensitive to natural forces. With this major retrospective exhibition – formerly at the Museum of Contemporary Art, now at the Art Gallery of Western Australia -Taylor is finally getting his due. Taylor’s exhibition surveys a lifetime of making drawings, paintings and sculptures, and is accompanied by a major catalogue, with a biographical essay by the Art Gallery of Western Australia’s Gary Dufour and the MCA’s Russell Storer, who analyses the enigmatic beauty of Taylor’s late works.

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