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Realities Gallery

Realities Gallery was a Melbourne gallery which showed work of Australian art of the western and indigenous traditions, and Pacific and international art. It operated from 1971 to 1992.

History edit

Ross Street 1971–75 edit

In 1970 Danish-born Marianne Baillieu (1939–2012) set up business importing artworks for sale. With her husband, solicitor and businessman Ian Baillieu,[1] they purchased a small retail property in Ross Street, Toorak, which they renovated to open Realities gallery there in April 1971. The Bulletin magazine described the gallery in up-market Toorak Village as having "the air of a sparkling white eggshell with almost every surface glazed white, including the floor which means the public must put on Abominable Snowman socks to be able to walk on it."[2]

In October 1974 the gallery presented old master drawings, watercolours and prints rarely seen for sale in Australia. The works were acquired from London, Boston, and New York. A catalogue of 35 pages, including 12 pages of plates, displayed works in the exhibition from Italian, Dutch and French schools from the 16th to 18th centuries, including Annibale Carracci's Head of a Boy Wearing a Flat Cap priced at $A12,500; Giovanni Battista Tiepolo with two drawings ($A7,000 and $A8,000); and Jacob Jordaens' The Martyrdom of St Sebastian ($A7,500), with others by Bonasone, Boschi, Busiri, Cipriani, Ferri, Garzi, Graziani, Martini, Novelli, and Pinelli.[3][4] Another achievement of this early period was Baillieu's sale of works to the Sydney Opera House which was then completing construction.[2]

Realities attracted crowds of students and the general public and Baillieu expressed her delight in giving wide exposure to a broad range of the art that she showed, which included dolls,[5] weaving and electronics as well as the traditional media:

“I like to produce exhibitions which have purpose. I like to classify, not just show things indiscriminately. I like to put together a formal survey which will produce an emotional reaction for the community, one aspect of an artist’s work, a trend or movement. For instance I have had exhibitions showing artists work today beside their work [of] 20 years ago."[2]

Jackson Street 1975–1992 edit

The early 1970s brought a boom in sales of locally produced art, joining a worldwide upward trend in the art market that did not pause until the early 1990s.[2][6] The major state galleries, especially those of Victoria and New South Wales which were glamorously re-housed, were collecting Australian works and receiving blockbuster exhibitions from overseas, and art was seen as a viable investment, with incentives provided by the culturally activist Whitlam government.[7]

Deciding to concentrate on Australian artists,[8][9][10] in 1975, Baillieu moved Realities to 33-35 Jackson Street, Toorak.[11] Incidentally, the same year saw the closure of neighbouring Toorak Gallery 1.3 km away at 277 Toorak Rd., South Yarra, which had for ten years shown mainly contemporary Australian art.[12][13]

Realities' new venue was on a larger site of 1,117 sq. metres occupied by historic buildings; a schoolhouse (c.1867), parish hall (c.1912), verger’s cottage (1928) and a small ablutions block, and had them renovated and combined by architect Ross Ramus of Gunn Hayball Pty. Ltd.[14] The adaptation of the building as a gallery (most particularly the work to the Hall) was documented in a contemporary national survey as an example of the recycling of heritage buildings.[15] George Baldessin's three-part sculpture in bronze, rusted steel and chrome was sited at the entrance, and the first exhibition was Roger Kemp's.[16] Brigid Cole-Adams described the space in an April 1980 article on the occasion of Bailleu's departure;

"It is housed in an old church covered in morning glory which once echoed to the dibbing and dobbing or small scouts. Now the wooden ceilings have been opened with skylights and the white walls will take even the largest modern paintings. The main hall is used for exhibitions and a second room, through the office, displays work in stock…Off this room Is a small courtyard with [a sculpture of a woman in her bath] in polyester and epoxy resin by Port Fairy sculptor Don Stewart."[17]

Aboriginal art also enjoyed unprecedented interest,[18] and in August 1977, Baillieu presented Paintings by the Desert Tribes of Central Australia at Realities,[19] the first exhibition by Papunya Tula artists at a commercial gallery, and sold Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri's Warlugulong (1977), an acrylic on canvas painting, for A$1,200 to the Commonwealth Bank.[20] After being on-sold several times, the work was auctioned in 2007 for $2.4 million, beating all previous records for Aboriginal artwork.[21]

Realities was one of few contemporary art galleries to show photography just as it too became collectible. Photographer-exhibitors included Bill Henson, Mark Strizic, Grant Mudford, American Leigh Weiner, and Joyce Evans.

In 1981 as Gough Whitlam launched a biography[22] of Melbourne artist Clifton Pugh at the gallery, he joked about having to make his speech in front of his nemesis Sir John Kerr in a controversial portrait painted by Pugh in 1975;[23] "I'll have you know I had nothing to do with the placing of the exhibit."[24] In the same year, a joint exhibition by Pugh and Frank Hodgkinson of works they made in Arnhem Land was sold out for $100,000 before opening, the works all purchased by the one buyer, the multi-millionaire former car salesman Dennis Gowing.[25]

Baillieu was notably coy about money matters, saying "I never try to sell paintings, people have to ask me to buy them," and prices were not displayed on the works on exhibition, nor in the catalogues.[17]

Administration edit

Baillieu remained director from 1971 until 1980.[26] In 1976 Evi Robinson, as administrator, and Rhonda Senbergs,[27] both partners of artists who exhibited there, joined her. Following her mother's death, in 1980 Baillieu sold the gallery to Pauline Wrobel for $365,000 (a value of $1,574,000 in 2019), and moved in 1981 to a studio house in Williamstown to paint full time,[28] becoming a finalist in the 1988 Archibald Prize with a controversial three-metre tall semi-abstract portrait of filmmaker Paul Cox which attracted further notoriety when it was cut and smeared by vandals.[29]

The gallery continued under the management of Wrobel and Robinson who retained most of the stable of artists.[30] The scale of most paintings exhibited meant they were rarely purchased for domestic settings,[17] so buyers were museums, public galleries, banks and corporations, and amongst the purchasers of artworks from Realities were Government departments including, for example, the Department of Home Affairs and Environment ($3,500[31] and $6,150 in 1982),[32] and New South Wales Artbank ($11,900 in 1988,[33] and $2,950 in 1989).[34]

Closure edit

The gallery was forced by the economic recession in July 1992 to shut its doors, and on its announcement of closure Luba Bilu, Chair of the Australian Commercial Galleries Association, remarked that "important things had happened at Realities" which helped to establish its reputation for "honesty and integrity."[35] The building was sold[36] for $840,000 in November 1992.[37]

Exhibitions edit

Exhibitions held at the gallery while at Ross Street, Toorak edit

  • 1971, 14 May – 5 May: Group exhibition: Jutta Feddersen tapestries; Richard Anuszkiewicz silkscreen prints; Michael McKinnon kinetics; Oiva Toikka glass sculptures[38]
  • 1971, 9 June – 3 July: Douglas Annand, Cresside Collette, the Optronic Kinetics group founded 1970 at Tin Sheds at Sydney University and including Bert Flugelman, Jim McDonnell, David Smith
  • 1971, from 4 August: Mirka Mora solo show, dolls and drawings[10][5]
  • 1972, 6–29 April: Richard Brecknock (sculptures), Tim Benson (jewellery), West African masks ; New Guinea pottery.
  • 1972, 31 May – 24 June: Robert Boynes, Helge Larsen, Darani Lewers
  • 1972, 28 June – 22 July: Victor Vasarely, Michael McKinnon, Clifford Frith, John Hansen
  • 1973, 8 February – 3 March: Drawing exhibition I - Australian artists born before 1930, including "Ringer, 1972" by Russell Drysdale.
  • 1973, 7–31 March: Drawing exhibition II - Australian artists born after 1930
  • 1973, July: Roger Kemp solo[39]
  • 1973, 24 October – 24 November: Sculpture survey: including small sculptures at Realities and large sculptures at Como Gardens, Como Avenue, South Yarra with 8-page catalogue[40]
  • 1973: Grant Mudford
  • 1974, April: Mark Strizic, Realities 74, photographs[41]
  • 1974, 2–18 May: Mirka Mora, Erotic Drawings and Figures[42]
  • 1974, from 1 October: Old master drawings, watercolours and prints
  • 1974: John Robinson: Paintings and screenprints

At Jackson Street edit

  • 1975: Roger Kemp
  • 1975, 1 October – 1 November: Sculpture survey: 500 BC - 1973 AD
  • 1976: David Aspden
  • 1977, 24 February – 23 March: Drawing exhibition, including John Perceval, Noel Counihan, Arthur Boyd, Mirka Mora.
  • 1977: John Robinson, Paintings
  • 1977: Clifton Pugh
  • 1977: Inge King[43]
  • 1977, from 9 August: Paintings by the desert tribes of Central Australia and carvings by the Tiwi tribe of Bathurst and Melville Islands
  • 1977, 26 October – 18 November: 19th and 20th century prints from P. & D. Colnaghi, Ltd, London, with 11 page illustrated catalogue
  • 1978, 2–29 March: Frank Hodgkinson
  • 1978, 4 May – 2 June: Selected fine prints from 1860-1910 from the Impressionist period to the beginning of Art Nouveau, from David Tunick, Inc., New York, USA, with catalogue of 13 pages.
  • 1978, from 25 April: Artists' choice at Realities, organised by the Green Hills Foundation Limited with proceeds to Aboriginal education programs conducted by The Foundation.
  • 1978, March: Donald Friend[44]
  • 1978: Baldessin Memorial Exhibition
  • 1978, 5–28 October: Exhibition of old master drawings, watercolours and prints from Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., London
  • 1979, April: Noel Counihan[45]
  • 1979: Clarice Beckett Retrospective
  • 1979, 28 June – 21 July: Selected modern prints from 1905-1955 from David Tunick, Inc., New York, USA.
  • 1979, 9 August – 15 September: Pre-Columban art of Mexico
  • 1979: Asher Bilu Infinities[46]
  • 1979, Klaus Zimmer: Realities Gallery window installation

Under the direction of Pauline Wrobel edit

  • 1980, 6 May – 14 June: Group exhibition with Rick Amor, Asher Bilu, Robert Boynes, Noel Counihan, Frank Hodgkinson, Gil Jamieson, Roger Kemp, Sandra Leveson, John Money, Ross Moore, Mirka Mora, Trevor Nickolls, Clifton Pugh, John Roninson, Andrew Sibley, Edwin Tanner, Robin Wallace-Crabbe, John Wolseley.
  • 1980, from 24 November: Aboriginal bark paintings, Tiwi poles and carvings and Yirrkala carvings, including "Mimi spirits and Namorodo spirits" by George Djayhngurru, Oenpelli and "Bima and Waijai bird" by Paddy Henry Tiempi, Bathurst Island.
  • 1980: Mike Green
  • 1981: Leigh Weiner photographs
  • 1981: David Aspden
  • 1981: Clifton Pugh and Frank Hodgkinson. Arnhem Land series.
  • 1981, from 1 December: Summer exhibition. John Money, John Wolseley, Mirka Mora, Inge King, John Robinson, Gareth Sansom, Colin Lanceley, Brian Dunlop, Frank Hodgkinson, Roger Kemp, Noel Counihan, Brett Whiteley.
  • 1982, 1–26 March: Lloyd Rees
  • 1982: Gareth Sansom
  • 1982, June–July: Anthony Pryor
  • 1982: John Robinson, Paintings[47]
  • 1982: David Aspden
  • 1983: Print exhibition with "The Bodford Terrace Folio" by various print makers, John Brack, Noel Counihan (Images of Opoul), John Courier, Jeffrey Makin, Colin Lanceley, John Money, Brian Dunlop, Leonard French, Frank Hodgkinson, Robert Jacks, Roger Kemp, Les Kossatz, Jan Senbergs, John Olsen, Andrew Sibley, Lloyd Rees (New lithographs 1982), John Robinson, Andrew Southal, Fred Williams.
  • 1983: Garet Sansom
  • 1983: David Aspden
  • 1983: Jon Cattapan, Paintings, Constructions And Works On Paper[48]
  • 1984: Jeffrey Makin, Ash Wednesday series
  • 1984: John Robinson, Paintings, Drawings
  • 1984: Selected Works
  • 1984 Terry Matassoni: Recent Paintings
  • 1985: Mike Green
  • 1985: Kerry Gregan[49]
  • 1985: John Beard[50]
  • 1985: Realities Salutes, Prints by Australian Artists
  • 1985: Roar Studios artists, Raw Reality[51]
  • 1986: Joyce Evans, But I Know What I Like, photographs
  • 1986: Terry Matassoni: Paintings and Gouaches
  • 1986: David Aspden
  • 1986: Kerry Gregan
  • 1986: John Robinson, Paintings, Drawings
  • 1987, September–October: Anthony Pryor
  • 1987: Kerry Gregan
  • 1987, November: Bill Henson: Untitled 1985-86[52]
  • 1988, 3–21 December: Selected original prints exhibition by Noel Counihan, John Brack, Fred Williams, Roger Kemp.
  • 1988, 10 June – 7 July: Group exhibition
  • 1988: Rachel Rovay, Once Upon a Time
  • 1988, October–November: Paul Partos, Calendar Paintings
  • 1988: Mike Green
  • 1988: David Aspden
  • 1989: Terry Matassoni: Paintings and Works on Paper
  • 1989: John Robinson, Paintings, Lithographs
  • 1989: Jeffrey Makin
  • 1989: Bill Henson, Untitled 1987-88
  • 1990: Terry Matassoni: Works on Paper
  • 1990: Peter Horak
  • 1990, September: Anthony Pryor
  • 1990, October: John Beard
  • 1991: Terry Matassoni: Recent Work
  • 1991: John Robinson, Survey Exhibition 1979 - 1991
  • 1991: 17 August – 5 September: Jennifer Marshall, paintings[53]
  • 1991: Bill Henson, Paris Opera Project
  • 1991, November: Anthony Pryor
  • 1991: Jeffrey Makin[54]
  • 1992, 7–26 March Selected prints exhibition.
  • 1992: Kerry Gregan
  • 1992, 12–27 June: A tribute to Anthony Pryor
  • 1992: Terry Matassoni: Recent Work’

References edit

  1. ^ "THE ONE ACCESSORY I JUST CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 41, no. 52. Australia. 29 May 1974. p. 41. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ a b c d "MELBOURNE The boom some love to hate (21 September 1974)", The Bulletin, 096 (4924), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 21 September 1974, ISSN 0007-4039
  3. ^ "ART (5 October 1974)", The Bulletin, 096 (4926), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 5 October 1974, ISSN 0007-4039
  4. ^ "ART (27 April 1974)", The Bulletin, 096 (4903), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 27 April 1974, ISSN 0007-4039
  5. ^ a b "VIBRANT, VOLATILE ARTIST". The Canberra Times. Vol. 55, no. 16, 598. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 7 March 1981. p. 17. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ "Australian Art Auction Sales - Numbers Offered and Sold". www.aasd.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  7. ^ Australia, National Museum of (8 June 2011). "Understanding Museums - Art Museums in Australia". nma.gov.au. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  8. ^ Heathcote, Christopher; Kemp, Roger, 1908-1987 (2007), A quest for enlightenment : the art of Roger Kemp, Macmillan, p. 148, ISBN 978-1-876832-43-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Sibley, Andrew J; Thomas, David, 1937-, (author.); McGregor, Ken, (book producer.) (2004), Andrew Sibley : an epic of the everyman, Macmillan Art, ISBN 978-1-876832-15-5 {{citation}}: |author2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ a b Harding, Lesley; Morgan, Kendrah, (author.) (2018), Mirka & Georges : a culinary affair (1st ed.), Miegunyah Press, ISBN 978-0-522-87220-0 {{citation}}: |author2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ "End of the haul (17 April 1976)", The Bulletin, 098 (5003), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 17 April 1976, ISSN 0007-4039
  12. ^ Gallery, Toorak Art. [Toorak Art Gallery : Australian Gallery File].
  13. ^ "Toorak Art Gallery [1]. (1964 – 1974) · Australian Prints + Printmaking". www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  14. ^ Statham, John (1 October 2009). "Heritage Place – Citation Assessment: Former St Johns Church of England School and Parish Hall" (PDF). Stonnington Council.
  15. ^ Latreille, Anne; Latreille, Peter; Lovell, Peter H (1981), New uses for old buildings in Australia, Oxford University Press, p. 52, ISBN 978-0-19-554301-8
  16. ^ "MELBOURNE A moveable festival (25 October 1975)", The Bulletin, 097 (4980), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 25 October 1975, ISSN 0007-4039
  17. ^ a b c Brigid Cole-Adams, 'Art on the grand scale,' in The Age, Tuesday, 15 April 1980, p.21
  18. ^ Coate, Bronwyn. "A Comparative Study of Australian Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Art" (PDF).
  19. ^ "Catalogue: 'Some Interpretations of Landscape'. Tasmanian School of Art Gallery, University Of Tasmania, Mt. Nelson Campus, Hobart. October 26- November 14, 1981" (PDF). Paul Zika. 1981.
  20. ^ Ryan, Judith; Batty, Philip; National Gallery of Victoria (2011), Tjukurrtjanu : origins of Western Desert art, National Gallery of Victoria, ISBN 978-0-7241-0345-4
  21. ^ "Clifford Possum art sells for $2.4m record". NewsComAu. 24 July 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  22. ^ Allen, Traudi; Pugh, Clifton, 1924-1990 (1981), Clifton Pugh, patterns of a lifetime : a biography, Nelson, ISBN 978-0-17-005443-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ "Taken at Realities Gallery in Toorak almost seven years after the dismissal, we see Gough Whitlam launching Clifton Pugh's biography "Patterns of a Lifetime" while appearing to be shadowed by a sinister ghost or demon from the past - in the form of Pugh's virtual life-size portrait of Kerr". The Strategist. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  24. ^ "Casting a long shadow". The Canberra Times. Vol. 55, no. 16, 614. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 23 March 1981. p. 7. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  25. ^ "Mansion that's a million-dollar hobby". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 49, no. 2. Australia. 17 June 1981. p. 84. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  26. ^ MYER, ROD (10 April 2012). "Gallery owner chose to be game not gamekeeper". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  27. ^ Realities by Luba Bilu | Blurb Books Australia. 24 January 2011.
  28. ^ Lynette Fern, 'Galleries,' in The Sydney Morning Herald, Friday, 26 October 1990, p.16
  29. ^ Louise Bellamy, 'Vandalism inspires art,' in The Age, Thursday, 23 November 1989, p.14
  30. ^ "Putting the art before the course". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 50, no. 25. Australia. 8 December 1982. p. 29. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ "Contracts Arranged". Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette. General. No. G37. Australia. 14 September 1982. p. 83. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  32. ^ "Contracts Arranged". Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette. General. No. G43. Australia. 26 October 1982. p. 60. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^ "CONTRACTS ARRANGED". Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette. Purchasing And Disposals. No. PD32. Australia. 31 August 1988. p. 1770. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  34. ^ "CONTRACTS ARRANGED". Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette. Purchasing And Disposals. No. PD24. Australia. 28 June 1989. p. 874. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  35. ^ Rebecca Lancashire, 'Realities feels the bite of recession,' in The Age, Wednesday, 8 July 1992. p.16
  36. ^ The Age (Melbourne), 8 July 1992
  37. ^ "Realities Gallery, ph:0398273312. 35 Jackson Street, Toorak - Australian Business". www.showneighbour.com. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  38. ^ Gleeson, James (12 July 1970). "New Shows". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 106.
  39. ^ "ART No easy solutions (7 July 1973)", The Bulletin, 095 (4861), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 7 July 1973, ISSN 0007-4039
  40. ^ Realities [gallery] sculpture survey 1973, [Realities [gallery] sculpture survey 1973 : Australian Gallery File], retrieved 17 November 2019{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ "Bulletin Briefing ART (13 April 1974)", The Bulletin, 096 (4901), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 13 April 1974, ISSN 0007-4039
  42. ^ "ART (27 April 1974)", The Bulletin, 096 (4903), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 27 April 1974, ISSN 0007-4039
  43. ^ Inge King with Temple gate, Realities Gallery, Melbourne 1977 (photo)"Obituaries". nga.gov.au. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  44. ^ Friend, Donald (2001), Gray, Anne; Hetherington, Paul (eds.), The diaries of Donald Friend, National Library of Australia, ISBN 978-0-642-10738-1
  45. ^ "BATMAN'S MELBOURNE Passionate paintings by an old commo (24 April 1979)", The Bulletin, 100 (5157), John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 24 April 1979, ISSN 0007-4039
  46. ^ "1979 Exhibition: INFINITIES". Asher Bilu. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  47. ^ "Artist mindful of perceptions.(News)", The Age (Melbourne, Australia), Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited: 12, 8 May 2009, ISSN 0312-6307
  48. ^ "Jon Cattapan: possible histories". Artlink Magazine. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  49. ^ "Bett Gallery Hobart - Kerry Gregan". www.bettgallery.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  50. ^ Catalano, Gary, Solo Exhibition-Realities Gallery, Melbourne, The AGE, Review, 4 December 1985.
  51. ^ "© David Larwill Curriculum Vitae - Anthea Polson Art". www.antheapolsonart.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  52. ^ "Henson reframes the past.(Life & Style)", The Age (Melbourne, Australia), Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited: 20, 23 November 2013, ISSN 0312-6307
  53. ^ "Jennifer Marshall paintings realities. 35 Jackson St Toorak, 17 August - September 5th 1991 and". Prints and Printmaking. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  54. ^ Makin, Jeffrey; Olsen, John; Zimmer, Jenny; Heathcote, Christopher (2002), Australia Felix : landscapes, Macmillan Art Publishing, ISBN 978-1-876832-96-4

realities, gallery, melbourne, gallery, which, showed, work, australian, western, indigenous, traditions, pacific, international, operated, from, 1971, 1992, contents, history, ross, street, 1971, jackson, street, 1975, 1992, administration, closure, exhibitio. Realities Gallery was a Melbourne gallery which showed work of Australian art of the western and indigenous traditions and Pacific and international art It operated from 1971 to 1992 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ross Street 1971 75 1 2 Jackson Street 1975 1992 1 3 Administration 2 Closure 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Exhibitions held at the gallery while at Ross Street Toorak 3 2 At Jackson Street 3 3 Under the direction of Pauline Wrobel 4 ReferencesHistory editRoss Street 1971 75 edit In 1970 Danish born Marianne Baillieu 1939 2012 set up business importing artworks for sale With her husband solicitor and businessman Ian Baillieu 1 they purchased a small retail property in Ross Street Toorak which they renovated to open Realities gallery there in April 1971 The Bulletin magazine described the gallery in up market Toorak Village as having the air of a sparkling white eggshell with almost every surface glazed white including the floor which means the public must put on Abominable Snowman socks to be able to walk on it 2 In October 1974 the gallery presented old master drawings watercolours and prints rarely seen for sale in Australia The works were acquired from London Boston and New York A catalogue of 35 pages including 12 pages of plates displayed works in the exhibition from Italian Dutch and French schools from the 16th to 18th centuries including Annibale Carracci s Head of a Boy Wearing a Flat Cap priced at A12 500 Giovanni Battista Tiepolo with two drawings A7 000 and A8 000 and Jacob Jordaens The Martyrdom of St Sebastian A7 500 with others by Bonasone Boschi Busiri Cipriani Ferri Garzi Graziani Martini Novelli and Pinelli 3 4 Another achievement of this early period was Baillieu s sale of works to the Sydney Opera House which was then completing construction 2 Realities attracted crowds of students and the general public and Baillieu expressed her delight in giving wide exposure to a broad range of the art that she showed which included dolls 5 weaving and electronics as well as the traditional media I like to produce exhibitions which have purpose I like to classify not just show things indiscriminately I like to put together a formal survey which will produce an emotional reaction for the community one aspect of an artist s work a trend or movement For instance I have had exhibitions showing artists work today beside their work of 20 years ago 2 Jackson Street 1975 1992 edit The early 1970s brought a boom in sales of locally produced art joining a worldwide upward trend in the art market that did not pause until the early 1990s 2 6 The major state galleries especially those of Victoria and New South Wales which were glamorously re housed were collecting Australian works and receiving blockbuster exhibitions from overseas and art was seen as a viable investment with incentives provided by the culturally activist Whitlam government 7 Deciding to concentrate on Australian artists 8 9 10 in 1975 Baillieu moved Realities to 33 35 Jackson Street Toorak 11 Incidentally the same year saw the closure of neighbouring Toorak Gallery 1 3 km away at 277 Toorak Rd South Yarra which had for ten years shown mainly contemporary Australian art 12 13 Realities new venue was on a larger site of 1 117 sq metres occupied by historic buildings a schoolhouse c 1867 parish hall c 1912 verger s cottage 1928 and a small ablutions block and had them renovated and combined by architect Ross Ramus of Gunn Hayball Pty Ltd 14 The adaptation of the building as a gallery most particularly the work to the Hall was documented in a contemporary national survey as an example of the recycling of heritage buildings 15 George Baldessin s three part sculpture in bronze rusted steel and chrome was sited at the entrance and the first exhibition was Roger Kemp s 16 Brigid Cole Adams described the space in an April 1980 article on the occasion of Bailleu s departure It is housed in an old church covered in morning glory which once echoed to the dibbing and dobbing or small scouts Now the wooden ceilings have been opened with skylights and the white walls will take even the largest modern paintings The main hall is used for exhibitions and a second room through the office displays work in stock Off this room Is a small courtyard with a sculpture of a woman in her bath in polyester and epoxy resin by Port Fairy sculptor Don Stewart 17 Aboriginal art also enjoyed unprecedented interest 18 and in August 1977 Baillieu presented Paintings by the Desert Tribes of Central Australia at Realities 19 the first exhibition by Papunya Tula artists at a commercial gallery and sold Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri s Warlugulong 1977 an acrylic on canvas painting for A 1 200 to the Commonwealth Bank 20 After being on sold several times the work was auctioned in 2007 for 2 4 million beating all previous records for Aboriginal artwork 21 Realities was one of few contemporary art galleries to show photography just as it too became collectible Photographer exhibitors included Bill Henson Mark Strizic Grant Mudford American Leigh Weiner and Joyce Evans In 1981 as Gough Whitlam launched a biography 22 of Melbourne artist Clifton Pugh at the gallery he joked about having to make his speech in front of his nemesis Sir John Kerr in a controversial portrait painted by Pugh in 1975 23 I ll have you know I had nothing to do with the placing of the exhibit 24 In the same year a joint exhibition by Pugh and Frank Hodgkinson of works they made in Arnhem Land was sold out for 100 000 before opening the works all purchased by the one buyer the multi millionaire former car salesman Dennis Gowing 25 Baillieu was notably coy about money matters saying I never try to sell paintings people have to ask me to buy them and prices were not displayed on the works on exhibition nor in the catalogues 17 Administration edit Baillieu remained director from 1971 until 1980 26 In 1976 Evi Robinson as administrator and Rhonda Senbergs 27 both partners of artists who exhibited there joined her Following her mother s death in 1980 Baillieu sold the gallery to Pauline Wrobel for 365 000 a value of 1 574 000 in 2019 and moved in 1981 to a studio house in Williamstown to paint full time 28 becoming a finalist in the 1988 Archibald Prize with a controversial three metre tall semi abstract portrait of filmmaker Paul Cox which attracted further notoriety when it was cut and smeared by vandals 29 The gallery continued under the management of Wrobel and Robinson who retained most of the stable of artists 30 The scale of most paintings exhibited meant they were rarely purchased for domestic settings 17 so buyers were museums public galleries banks and corporations and amongst the purchasers of artworks from Realities were Government departments including for example the Department of Home Affairs and Environment 3 500 31 and 6 150 in 1982 32 and New South Wales Artbank 11 900 in 1988 33 and 2 950 in 1989 34 Closure editThe gallery was forced by the economic recession in July 1992 to shut its doors and on its announcement of closure Luba Bilu Chair of the Australian Commercial Galleries Association remarked that important things had happened at Realities which helped to establish its reputation for honesty and integrity 35 The building was sold 36 for 840 000 in November 1992 37 Exhibitions editExhibitions held at the gallery while at Ross Street Toorak edit 1971 14 May 5 May Group exhibition Jutta Feddersen tapestries Richard Anuszkiewicz silkscreen prints Michael McKinnon kinetics Oiva Toikka glass sculptures 38 1971 9 June 3 July Douglas Annand Cresside Collette the Optronic Kinetics group founded 1970 at Tin Sheds at Sydney University and including Bert Flugelman Jim McDonnell David Smith 1971 from 4 August Mirka Mora solo show dolls and drawings 10 5 1972 6 29 April Richard Brecknock sculptures Tim Benson jewellery West African masks New Guinea pottery 1972 31 May 24 June Robert Boynes Helge Larsen Darani Lewers 1972 28 June 22 July Victor Vasarely Michael McKinnon Clifford Frith John Hansen 1973 8 February 3 March Drawing exhibition I Australian artists born before 1930 including Ringer 1972 by Russell Drysdale 1973 7 31 March Drawing exhibition II Australian artists born after 1930 1973 July Roger Kemp solo 39 1973 24 October 24 November Sculpture survey including small sculptures at Realities and large sculptures at Como Gardens Como Avenue South Yarra with 8 page catalogue 40 1973 Grant Mudford 1974 April Mark Strizic Realities 74 photographs 41 1974 2 18 May Mirka Mora Erotic Drawings and Figures 42 1974 from 1 October Old master drawings watercolours and prints 1974 John Robinson Paintings and screenprints At Jackson Street edit 1975 Roger Kemp 1975 1 October 1 November Sculpture survey 500 BC 1973 AD 1976 David Aspden 1977 24 February 23 March Drawing exhibition including John Perceval Noel Counihan Arthur Boyd Mirka Mora 1977 John Robinson Paintings 1977 Clifton Pugh 1977 Inge King 43 1977 from 9 August Paintings by the desert tribes of Central Australia and carvings by the Tiwi tribe of Bathurst and Melville Islands 1977 26 October 18 November 19th and 20th century prints from P amp D Colnaghi Ltd London with 11 page illustrated catalogue 1978 2 29 March Frank Hodgkinson 1978 4 May 2 June Selected fine prints from 1860 1910 from the Impressionist period to the beginning of Art Nouveau from David Tunick Inc New York USA with catalogue of 13 pages 1978 from 25 April Artists choice at Realities organised by the Green Hills Foundation Limited with proceeds to Aboriginal education programs conducted by The Foundation 1978 March Donald Friend 44 1978 Baldessin Memorial Exhibition 1978 5 28 October Exhibition of old master drawings watercolours and prints from Thos Agnew amp Sons Ltd London 1979 April Noel Counihan 45 1979 Clarice Beckett Retrospective 1979 28 June 21 July Selected modern prints from 1905 1955 from David Tunick Inc New York USA 1979 9 August 15 September Pre Columban art of Mexico 1979 Asher Bilu Infinities 46 1979 Klaus Zimmer Realities Gallery window installation Under the direction of Pauline Wrobel edit 1980 6 May 14 June Group exhibition with Rick Amor Asher Bilu Robert Boynes Noel Counihan Frank Hodgkinson Gil Jamieson Roger Kemp Sandra Leveson John Money Ross Moore Mirka Mora Trevor Nickolls Clifton Pugh John Roninson Andrew Sibley Edwin Tanner Robin Wallace Crabbe John Wolseley 1980 from 24 November Aboriginal bark paintings Tiwi poles and carvings and Yirrkala carvings including Mimi spirits and Namorodo spirits by George Djayhngurru Oenpelli and Bima and Waijai bird by Paddy Henry Tiempi Bathurst Island 1980 Mike Green 1981 Leigh Weiner photographs 1981 David Aspden 1981 Clifton Pugh and Frank Hodgkinson Arnhem Land series 1981 from 1 December Summer exhibition John Money John Wolseley Mirka Mora Inge King John Robinson Gareth Sansom Colin Lanceley Brian Dunlop Frank Hodgkinson Roger Kemp Noel Counihan Brett Whiteley 1982 1 26 March Lloyd Rees 1982 Gareth Sansom 1982 June July Anthony Pryor 1982 John Robinson Paintings 47 1982 David Aspden 1983 Print exhibition with The Bodford Terrace Folio by various print makers John Brack Noel Counihan Images of Opoul John Courier Jeffrey Makin Colin Lanceley John Money Brian Dunlop Leonard French Frank Hodgkinson Robert Jacks Roger Kemp Les Kossatz Jan Senbergs John Olsen Andrew Sibley Lloyd Rees New lithographs 1982 John Robinson Andrew Southal Fred Williams 1983 Garet Sansom 1983 David Aspden 1983 Jon Cattapan Paintings Constructions And Works On Paper 48 1984 Jeffrey Makin Ash Wednesday series 1984 John Robinson Paintings Drawings 1984 Selected Works 1984 Terry Matassoni Recent Paintings 1985 Mike Green 1985 Kerry Gregan 49 1985 John Beard 50 1985 Realities Salutes Prints by Australian Artists 1985 Roar Studios artists Raw Reality 51 1986 Joyce Evans But I Know What I Like photographs 1986 Terry Matassoni Paintings and Gouaches 1986 David Aspden 1986 Kerry Gregan 1986 John Robinson Paintings Drawings 1987 September October Anthony Pryor 1987 Kerry Gregan 1987 November Bill Henson Untitled 1985 86 52 1988 3 21 December Selected original prints exhibition by Noel Counihan John Brack Fred Williams Roger Kemp 1988 10 June 7 July Group exhibition 1988 Rachel Rovay Once Upon a Time 1988 October November Paul Partos Calendar Paintings 1988 Mike Green 1988 David Aspden 1989 Terry Matassoni Paintings and Works on Paper 1989 John Robinson Paintings Lithographs 1989 Jeffrey Makin 1989 Bill Henson Untitled 1987 88 1990 Terry Matassoni Works on Paper 1990 Peter Horak 1990 September Anthony Pryor 1990 October John Beard 1991 Terry Matassoni Recent Work 1991 John Robinson Survey Exhibition 1979 1991 1991 17 August 5 September Jennifer Marshall paintings 53 1991 Bill Henson Paris Opera Project 1991 November Anthony Pryor 1991 Jeffrey Makin 54 1992 7 26 March Selected prints exhibition 1992 Kerry Gregan 1992 12 27 June A tribute to Anthony Pryor 1992 Terry Matassoni Recent Work References edit THE ONE ACCESSORY I JUST CAN T LIVE WITHOUT The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 41 no 52 Australia 29 May 1974 p 41 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia a b c d MELBOURNE The boom some love to hate 21 September 1974 The Bulletin 096 4924 John Haynes and J F Archibald 21 September 1974 ISSN 0007 4039 ART 5 October 1974 The Bulletin 096 4926 John Haynes and J F Archibald 5 October 1974 ISSN 0007 4039 ART 27 April 1974 The Bulletin 096 4903 John Haynes and J F Archibald 27 April 1974 ISSN 0007 4039 a b VIBRANT VOLATILE ARTIST The Canberra Times Vol 55 no 16 598 Australian Capital Territory Australia 7 March 1981 p 17 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia Australian Art Auction Sales Numbers Offered and Sold www aasd com au Retrieved 17 November 2019 Australia National Museum of 8 June 2011 Understanding Museums Art Museums in Australia nma gov au Retrieved 17 November 2019 Heathcote Christopher Kemp Roger 1908 1987 2007 A quest for enlightenment the art of Roger Kemp Macmillan p 148 ISBN 978 1 876832 43 8 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Sibley Andrew J Thomas David 1937 author McGregor Ken book producer 2004 Andrew Sibley an epic of the everyman Macmillan Art ISBN 978 1 876832 15 5 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a author2 has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Harding Lesley Morgan Kendrah author 2018 Mirka amp Georges a culinary affair 1st ed Miegunyah Press ISBN 978 0 522 87220 0 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a author2 has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link End of the haul 17 April 1976 The Bulletin 098 5003 John Haynes and J F Archibald 17 April 1976 ISSN 0007 4039 Gallery Toorak Art Toorak Art Gallery Australian Gallery File Toorak Art Gallery 1 1964 1974 Australian Prints Printmaking www printsandprintmaking gov au Retrieved 3 December 2019 Statham John 1 October 2009 Heritage Place Citation Assessment Former St Johns Church of England School and Parish Hall PDF Stonnington Council Latreille Anne Latreille Peter Lovell Peter H 1981 New uses for old buildings in Australia Oxford University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 19 554301 8 MELBOURNE A moveable festival 25 October 1975 The Bulletin 097 4980 John Haynes and J F Archibald 25 October 1975 ISSN 0007 4039 a b c Brigid Cole Adams Art on the grand scale in The Age Tuesday 15 April 1980 p 21 Coate Bronwyn A Comparative Study of Australian Indigenous and Non Indigenous Art PDF Catalogue Some Interpretations of Landscape Tasmanian School of Art Gallery University Of Tasmania Mt Nelson Campus Hobart October 26 November 14 1981 PDF Paul Zika 1981 Ryan Judith Batty Philip National Gallery of Victoria 2011 Tjukurrtjanu origins of Western Desert art National Gallery of Victoria ISBN 978 0 7241 0345 4 Clifford Possum art sells for 2 4m record NewsComAu 24 July 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2019 Allen Traudi Pugh Clifton 1924 1990 1981 Clifton Pugh patterns of a lifetime a biography Nelson ISBN 978 0 17 005443 0 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Taken at Realities Gallery in Toorak almost seven years after the dismissal we see Gough Whitlam launching Clifton Pugh s biography Patterns of a Lifetime while appearing to be shadowed by a sinister ghost or demon from the past in the form of Pugh s virtual life size portrait of Kerr The Strategist Retrieved 18 November 2019 Casting a long shadow The Canberra Times Vol 55 no 16 614 Australian Capital Territory Australia 23 March 1981 p 7 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia Mansion that s a million dollar hobby The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 49 no 2 Australia 17 June 1981 p 84 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia MYER ROD 10 April 2012 Gallery owner chose to be game not gamekeeper The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 17 November 2019 Realities by Luba Bilu Blurb Books Australia 24 January 2011 Lynette Fern Galleries in The Sydney Morning Herald Friday 26 October 1990 p 16 Louise Bellamy Vandalism inspires art in The Age Thursday 23 November 1989 p 14 Putting the art before the course The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 50 no 25 Australia 8 December 1982 p 29 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia Contracts Arranged Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette General No G37 Australia 14 September 1982 p 83 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia Contracts Arranged Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette General No G43 Australia 26 October 1982 p 60 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia CONTRACTS ARRANGED Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette Purchasing And Disposals No PD32 Australia 31 August 1988 p 1770 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia CONTRACTS ARRANGED Commonwealth Of Australia Gazette Purchasing And Disposals No PD24 Australia 28 June 1989 p 874 Retrieved 17 November 2019 via National Library of Australia Rebecca Lancashire Realities feels the bite of recession in The Age Wednesday 8 July 1992 p 16 The Age Melbourne 8 July 1992 Realities Gallery ph 0398273312 35 Jackson Street Toorak Australian Business www showneighbour com Retrieved 17 November 2019 Gleeson James 12 July 1970 New Shows The Sydney Morning Herald p 106 ART No easy solutions 7 July 1973 The Bulletin 095 4861 John Haynes and J F Archibald 7 July 1973 ISSN 0007 4039 Realities gallery sculpture survey 1973 Realities gallery sculpture survey 1973 Australian Gallery File retrieved 17 November 2019 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Bulletin Briefing ART 13 April 1974 The Bulletin 096 4901 John Haynes and J F Archibald 13 April 1974 ISSN 0007 4039 ART 27 April 1974 The Bulletin 096 4903 John Haynes and J F Archibald 27 April 1974 ISSN 0007 4039 Inge King with Temple gate Realities Gallery Melbourne 1977 photo Obituaries nga gov au Retrieved 17 November 2019 Friend Donald 2001 Gray Anne Hetherington Paul eds The diaries of Donald Friend National Library of Australia ISBN 978 0 642 10738 1 BATMAN S MELBOURNE Passionate paintings by an old commo 24 April 1979 The Bulletin 100 5157 John Haynes and J F Archibald 24 April 1979 ISSN 0007 4039 1979 Exhibition INFINITIES Asher Bilu Retrieved 23 August 2020 Artist mindful of perceptions News The Age Melbourne Australia Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited 12 8 May 2009 ISSN 0312 6307 Jon Cattapan possible histories Artlink Magazine Retrieved 17 November 2019 Bett Gallery Hobart Kerry Gregan www bettgallery com au Retrieved 17 November 2019 Catalano Gary Solo Exhibition Realities Gallery Melbourne The AGE Review 4 December 1985 c David Larwill Curriculum Vitae Anthea Polson Art www antheapolsonart com au Retrieved 17 November 2019 Henson reframes the past Life amp Style The Age Melbourne Australia Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited 20 23 November 2013 ISSN 0312 6307 Jennifer Marshall paintings realities 35 Jackson St Toorak 17 August September 5th 1991 and Prints and Printmaking Retrieved 17 November 2019 Makin Jeffrey Olsen John Zimmer Jenny Heathcote Christopher 2002 Australia Felix landscapes Macmillan Art Publishing ISBN 978 1 876832 96 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Realities Gallery amp oldid 1201220049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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