John Glover is Australia’s most distinguished early colonial artist and the only nineteenth-century painter to have had a successful career in Europe before migrating. He arrived from Britain to convict Tasmania in 1831 aged 64. Why did he, in old age, come to Australia and paint his most brilliant landscapes here? Ron Radford addresses these questions and examines Glover’s painting and farming at his Patterdale estate in northern Tasmania. He also records the recent saving of Glover’s 200-year-old Patterdale farmhouse and the re-creation of his studio and garden. Dr Radford stresses that Glover created Australia’s first great landscape canvases, many poignantly depicting the original Palawa inhabitants.
The author, Ron Radford, is a former Director of the National Gallery of Australia. Prior to that he was Senior Curator, then Director, of the Art Gallery of South Australia. Among other collecting areas, he has been responsible for building colonial collections in Ballarat, Adelaide and Canberra. He is the author of many catalogues, art books and articles. Dr Radford lives in Hobart.
Published by Ovata Press
PO Box 1448, Launceston, 7250, Tasmania
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