Lot #47 - Fred Williams
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Auction House:Deutscher and Hackett
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Sale Name:Twenty Classics of Australian Art + Important Australian and International Fine Art
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Sale Date:11 Nov 2020 ~ 7pm (AEDT)
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Lot #:47
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Lot Description:Fred Williams
(1927 – 1982)
Upwey I, 1965
gouache on paper
52.0 x 70.0 cm
signed lower right: Fred Williams -
Provenance:Estate of the artist; Lyn Williams, Melbourne; Rex Irwin Art Dealer, Sydney (label attached verso); Private collection, Sydney; Deutscher~Menzies, Sydney, 14 June 2006, lot 5; Private collection, Brisbane
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Exhibited:"Fred Williams (1927 – 1982)", Marlborough Fine Art, London, 1 November – 2 December 1995, cat. 18; "Fred Williams (1927 – 1982) Landscapes – Paintings, Gouaches & Etchings", Rex Irwin Art Dealer, Sydney, 6 – 31 October 1998, cat. 6
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Notes:"Upwey I", 1965 comes from a period of outstanding creativity, which included such masterpieces as "Upwey Landscape I", 1965, formerly in the collection of British Petroleum, London; "Upwey Landscape II"," "1965, in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; "Upwey Landscape III" in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; and "Upwey Landscape V", 1965, now in the Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria through the bequest of Blair Ritchie. Hailed as being ‘at his best’ in his solo show at Rudy Komon’s gallery in September 1966, Wallace Thornton in "The Sydney Morning Herald" presciently observed: ‘There is every chance he will go down in history as Australia’s greatest landscape artist’.1 Consisting of twelve oils and the same number of supporting gouaches, together with some etchings, the exhibition was packed with treasures. They included both oils and gouaches from the "Waterpond in Landscape" series, "Green Cloud and Owl", 1966, formerly in the Mertz Collection, USA, and "Red" "Landscape", 1966. Of the latter, Patrick McCaughey commented perceptively: ‘The quality of the gouache for "Red Landscape", possibly finer than the oil painting itself, suggests Williams was looking for a painting that would come out at a single shot, not something to be laboured over’.2 Williams often exhibited gouaches with his oil paintings, their importance in his oeuvre continuing to be recognised in later major shows including the National Gallery of Australia’s 2011 retrospective, "Fred Williams: Infinite Horizons". 1. Thornton, W.,'Is this our greatest landscape painter?' "Sydney Morning Herald", Sydney, 12 October 1966, p. 22 2. McCaughey, P., "Fred Williams", Murdoch Books, Sydney, 1996, p. 176
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Estimate:A$50,000 - 70,000
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Realised Price:
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Category:Art
This Sale has been held and this item is no longer available. Details are provided for information purposes only.