Artists Charles Blackman, Arthur Boyd and Barbara Blackman at the opening of the exhibition Recent Australian Painting, Whitechapel Gallery, July 1961 courtesy of Whitechapel Gallery, Whitechapel Gallery Archive
‘(Charles Blackman) has produced a large quantity of serious work at an age when most artists have not even approached their formative period. His work has imaginative power and a strong poetic bias… the curiously evocative quality of nearly all Blackman’s painting could easily carry this artist on to a very special place in the Australian art of our time.’1 Writing in Meanjin in 1952 after visiting Blackman’s first exhibition, an informal display of works pinned up on the walls of the coach house where he lived in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn, the artist and art critic Alan McCulloch was impressed. So too, were John and Sunday Reed, keen and informed supporters of modern art who had met the aspiring young artist several years earlier and purchased two paintings and a drawing. Blackman’s work also garnered support from his artistic peers, with Danila Vassilieff buying two pictures, remarking, ‘The bit I like about you is the bit with love in your heart.’2 Blackman’s first solo exhibition in a commercial gallery took place the following year at the Peter Bray Gallery in Melbourne and included a group of his Schoolgirl paintings, which are now regarded as one of the most significant groups of modern works produced in Australia during the immediate post-war years. The later 1950s saw the creation of the
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iconic Alice series, and the renowned, evocative paintings of faces and flowers. Blackman’s ability to imbue his pictures with a palpable sense of humanity and emotion was by then widely recognised. As Gertrude Langer wrote in response to his 1958 exhibition in Brisbane, ‘his art… speaks tenderly of suffering and joy, dreams and memories. His colours, brilliant as they are, are not employed for their own sake, but for their emotional import... a painter who speaks to the heart is to be treasured.’3 By the late 1950s, Blackman’s star was in the ascendant. One of his Alice paintings was acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in Paris in 1958, and in 1959 he won the Rowney Prize for drawing. His June 1960 exhibition at the Johnstone Gallery – which by that time had been relocated to the stylish Bowen Hills home of its founders, Brian and Marjorie Johnstone – sold out, realising about £4500 and enabling the Blackmans to buy a house in St Lucia.4 Two months later Blackman was awarded the prestigious Helena Rubinstein Travelling Scholarship and by the following February, he and his family had relocated to London, where they lived for the next five years. 1961 saw three of his works, including Dreaming in the Street, 1960 (National Gallery of Victoria) shown in Recent Australian Painting, the groundbreaking exhibition