Three hundred rare paintings documenting the past two centuries of life in NSW, Australia's first and most populous state, have gone on show together for the first time.
Not in an art gallery, but at the State Library of NSW, exhibited in a flamboyant "salon hang" reminiscent of the Parisian Belle Epoque.
It is little known that, aside from its literary collections, the library has gathered 1200 oil paintings and 160,000 sketches, watercolours, pastels and prints.
Some have artistic merit, and would be highly prized by Australia's state galleries. But most would be rejected by art curators.
Their value to the library and the people of the state is historic: they chart the diversity of the Australian experience. To prove their point, library staff picked out 10 paintings worthy of our attention.
Corroboree at Newcastle (c. 1818)
Corroboree at Newcastle by Joseph Lycett.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Joseph Lycett
The backstory: Lycett, a transported forger, arrived in Sydney in 1814. Under governor Macquarie, Lycett became one of the colony's earliest artists. This is arguably his most famous work. Despite its romanticism, Lycett had been privileged to observe the intimate customs and rituals of the Awabakal people in what we now know as the Hunter Valley.
Sarah Cobcroft (1856)
Sarah Cobcroft by Joseph Backler.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Joseph Backler
The backstory: Sarah was no "oil painting", but she was willing to travel to the other side of the world to be with her common-law husband. John Cobcroft, transported for highway robbery, arrived on the Second Fleet in 1790 aboard the Scarborough, followed by Sarah who was granted free passage because of her midwifery skills. Both were illiterate, but they prospered in NSW and had 10 children. They finally married when Sarah was 70 and John was 79.
Old Government House (1842)
Old Government House, Sydney by Conrad MartensCredit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Conrad Martens
The backstory: Martens, who sailed with Darwin on the Beagle, is probably Australia's most celebrated colonial era artist. He made his home in Sydney in 1835 and remained until his death in 1878. This painting disguises the fact the historic residence of the first governors had already become uninhabitable. There's a final irony. Unable to continue making a living as a professional artist, Martens became … a librarian.
Picnic at The Rocks (1952)
Picnic at The Rocks (1952) by Roland Wakelin.
Artist: Roland Wakelin
The backstory: The New Zealand-born, Cezanne-influenced artist is regarded as one of the pioneers of modern Australian art. This was created just 20 years after Sydney Harbour Bridge was "opened". Wakelin painted his landscape from Observatory Hill, looking along Lower Fort Street at The Rocks. The view remains much the same today, thanks to the union-imposed "Green Bans" of the 1970s.
Neighbourhood Watch (2009)
Neighbourhood Watch by Robyn Sweaney.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Robyn Sweaney
The backstory: Based in Mullumbimby on NSW's Far North Coast, Sweaney's works tend to document post-war building styles, sense of neighbourhood and changing cultural and social values connected with the word "home".
Maria Yulgivar (Portrait of an Aboriginal Woman) (1895)
Maria Yulgivar (Portrait of an Aboriginal Woman) by Tom Roberts.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Tom Roberts
The backstory: Roberts (The Golden Fleece, Bailed Up and A break away!) was commissioned in 1894 by the prominent landowner Edward Ogilvie to paint portraits of himself, his family and his Aboriginal farm workers and domestic servants at his property. Yuligilbar cattle station on the Clarence River, in northern NSW. Baryulgil, is the home community of the Mundine family (Anthony, Tony and Warren).
Fairy Bower, Manly (1956)
Fairy Bower, Manly by Alan Grieve.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Alan Grieve
The backstory: Grieve lived at Clontarf and painted many scenes of Middle Harbour and the Northern Beaches in the post-war period. Named by landowner Charles Hemington in 1858, the Bower was intended to be a picnic and refreshment area for visitors to Manly. Not much has changed at Fairy Bower (except there's better coffee now).
Collection day (2011)
Collection Day by John Bokor.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: John Bokor
The backstory: Bokor lives in Bulli, in Wollongong's northern suburbs, and this painting captures a slice of contemporary life. The garbage bins, lids flung open, rest between the two car driveways, with the ocean in the background. Pollution, recycling, over-consumption – it's all conveyed in a single aspect of modern life.
Barangaroo Headland Park from the Stamford on Kent (2015)
Barangaroo Headland Park from the Stamford on Kent by Jane Bennett.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Jane Bennett
The backstory: During the 1930s, this was known as "the Hungry Mile" as wharfies competed like industrial gladiators for a day's work. Less than a century later, the Hungry Mile has been transformed into a high-rise finance and services sector. The headland park – a miracle of 21st century engineering with 75,000 native trees and shrubs – thrives on what used to be a concrete apron serving container ships. The former maritime services control tower, which features so prominently in Bennett's painting, has since been demolished.
Toulgra, a native of NSW (1802)
Toulgra, a native of NSW by Nicolas-Martin Petit.Credit:State Library of NSW
Artist: Nicolas-Martin Petit
The backstory: In 1802, the French were much more interested in anthropology than the British. So when the French explorer Nicolas Baudin's two ships limped into Sydney Harbour for repairs, Petit took the opportunity of sketching the Indigenous inhabitants. Toulgra was 14 or 15 when Petit captured this image in pencil or dark graphite in Parramatta. Neither of their lives would last much longer. Petit returned to Paris, but died in 1804. Toulgra (thought to be a nephew of Bennelong) was imprisoned at Norfolk Island in 1805, retaliating against the European settlement of the Hawkesbury river.
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