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9781923042025

The Adelaide Art Scene

Becoming contemporary 1939-2000

Margot Osborne

This landmark anthology of new and archival writing on the Adelaide art scene across six decades reveals the untold story of the highs and lows of progressive art in Adelaide since the outbreak of the Second World War.

The Adelaide Art Scene: Becoming contemporary 1939-2000 is a compelling, multi-faceted account of the milieu in which progressive art evolved - through the roles of key artists and of landmark exhibitions, through bursts of maverick art criticism and art activism, through the competitive roles of art societies, the rise and fall of key art galleries, and the changing role of the city's flagship art museum, the Art Gallery of South Australia.

Published in association with Guildhouse and Carrick Hill, with financial support of the South Australian Government’s Department of Premier and Cabinet through Arts South Australia.

$120.00

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Adelaide author and curator, Dr Margot Osborne, has a PhD in art history from the University of Adelaide, where she is a visiting research fellow. She is the author or co-author of numerous catalogues and books on Australian artists, including Liz Williams: Body language (Wakefield Press, 2017); Christopher Orchard: The uncertainty of the poet (SALA monograph series, Wakefield Press, 2017); Giles Bettison: Pattern and perception (SALA monograph series, Wakefield Press, 2015); Jeff Mincham: Ceramics (Object Living Treasure monograph, 2009); Australian Glass Today (Wakefield Press, 2005); and Nick Mount: Incandescence (SALA monograph series, Wakefield Press, 2003). She has been editor of CACSA Broadsheet (1986-88); art critic for the Advertiser (1988-91); art and design feature writer for the Adelaide Review and the Advertiser (2003-07); guest editor of two issues of Artlink on 'Beauty' (2007) and 'Art, pattern and complexity' (2010); and a contributor to Australian art journals.

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ISBN   9781923042025
CATEGORIES: ,
IMAGES   Full colour throughout
PAGE COUNT   744
DIMENSIONS   265 x 225 mm