Norma Redpath

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Norma Redpath
OBE
Redpath in 1964, photographed by Mark Strizic
Born
Norma Redpath

(1928-11-20)20 November 1928
Melbourne, Australia
Died12 January 2013(2013-01-12) (aged 84)
NationalityAustralian
EducationSwinburne Technical College and Universita per Stranieri in Perugia
Known forSculpture
Notable workTreasury Fountain, Canberra
MovementCentre 5
AwardsOBE

Norma Redpath

OBE (20 November 1928 – 12 January 2013) was a prominent Australian sculptor, who worked in Italy and Melbourne
.

Early life and education

Norma Redpath was born on 20 November 1928.[1]

She studied painting from 1942 to 1948 (with a long break due to illness) at the

Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, both in Melbourne. Her studies there were largely self-directed, as she found no contemporary sculpture of interest to her in Australia.[2]

Bronze Relief (1964), at McClelland Sculpture Park

While still a student, she was invited to be a member of the Victorian Sculptors' Society (VSS) (which in late 1967 disbanded, and was reconstituted as the Association of Sculptors of Victoria (ASV)[3]), where she exhibited, and was later vice-president.[citation needed]

Career

Treasury Fountain (1969), Treasury Building, Canberra
Extended Column (1975), Canberra School of Music
Landscape Caryatide (1985), at McClelland Gallery and Sculpture Park

In 1952, she was teaching at the

Melbourne Technical College, and around this time also set up her first self-funded professional sculpture studio.[1]

In 1953 she was a founding member of the "Group of Four" with Inge King, Julius Kane and Clifford Last.[citation needed]

During the 1950s, she travelled to Europe, and studied in Italy from 1956 to 1958 at the Universita per Stranieri in Perugia, developing a love for Italy and Italian art.[2]

In 1958 she returned to Australia to take up a teaching post at the Swinburne Technical College, and became a founding member of the renowned "Centre Five" group of sculptors in 1959, a group which expanded from the Group of Four to add (among others) Lenton Parr, Vincas Jomantas and Teisutis Zikaras, who broke with the VSS and organised private exhibitions.[1] In 1960, she was one of the artists selected for the National Gallery of Victoria's Six Sculptors exhibition, which was the first exhibition of local modernist sculpture by the Gallery.[2]

By 1961 she had decisively turned to bronze, with Dawn figure, a plaster cast envisaged for casting which was awarded the inaugural Mildara (later Mildura) Prize for Sculpture. The same year she won both the Italian Government Travelling Scholarship and the Althea Dyason Bequest travelling scholarship (awarded by the Art Gallery of New South Wales[4]).

In 1962 she pursued her studies at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan, northern Italy, where she would later make a base as she travelled frequently back and forth between Italy and Australia. Sculptures cast there formed the basis of her Gallery A exhibition in Melbourne the following year. One of the sculptures was awarded her second Mildara Prize for Sculpture in 1964, and in 1966 she won the Transfield Prize for Sculpture.[2]

In 1968 she returned to Melbourne, establishing her second studio, in the inner-city suburb of Parkville, where she worked on a number of major commissions.[1]

In 1974, while again in Italy, Redpath married Antonio de Altamer, an Italian

naval architect. The worked together to refine the technical procedures of the Fonderia Artistica Battaglia and other foundries in the next decade.[1] From the late 1970s she ceased studio work, instead describing her sculptural ideas in a manuscript, Ideas and Images.[2]

From 1974 to 1985 she lived and worked alternately in her Milanese studio and Melbourne, and from 1985 she returned to Australia with her husband and set up her third Australian sculpture studio, this time in Carlton. Her last show was at the Heide Museum of Modern Art, in 2000.[1]

Recognition

In 1970 Redpath was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for services to contemporary sculpture.[5][2]

In 2006 she was awarded an honorary doctorate from her old college, now

Swinburne University.[1]

Later life and legacy

Redpath's husband died in 2000, the same year as her last show.[1]

After a long illness, she died in Melbourne in 2013, aged 84.[1]

Her Carlton studio and home is owned by the University of Melbourne, and is now available to artists and academics. It is managed by the Centre of Visual Art, and is able to be visited. Residencies of varying lengths of time are offered to artists, writers and researchers to develop new work as well as engage with the local workers in related fields.[4]

Selected works

  • Areopagitica (1958), Baillieu Library, University of Melbourne
  • Bronze Reliefs (1964), BP Administration Building, Crib Point, Victoria – relocated to BP building South Melbourne, relocated again to the McClelland Gallery and Sculpture Park in 1997. (image and details)
  • Treasury Fountain (1965–1969), Treasury Building,
    ACT
    ) – a two-piece bronze fountain in a rectangular granite pond.
  • Victoria Coats of Arms (1968), above entrance, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne– a bronze relief
  • Sculpture Column (1969–1972), Reserve Bank of Australia, Brisbane
  • Facade Relief (1970–1972), Victorian College of Pharmacy, Parkville, Melbourne
  • Sydney Rubbo Memorial Capital (1970–1973), Microbiology and Immunology Building Courtyard, University of Melbourne
  • Higuchi Sculpture (1971–1972), Manning Building at the Monash University in Melbourne – unveiled by Dr. Takeru Higuchi details in pdf document page 6
  • Extended Column (1972–1975), Canberra School of Music, Canberra
  • Paesaggio Cariatide (Carrying the Landscape) (1980–1985), undercroft of State Bank Centre, Bourke Street, in Melbourne – since 2003 at the
    McClelland Gallery and Sculpture Park in Langwarrin, Victoria[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wasch, Kenneth (23 January 2013). "Australian sculptor who was enamoured with Italy". The Age. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Mendelssohn and Kirby, Joanna and Sandy. "Bibliography". Design and Art Online Australia. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  3. ^ "History". Association of Sculptors of Victoria. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b "About the Norma Redpath Studio". Centre of Visual Art, University of Melbourne. 27 February 2020. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
  5. ^ "Its an Honour". AUSTRALIAN HONOURS SEARCH FACILITY.
  6. ^ "Norma Redpath: Works from the Studio, 1970s & 1980s". Charles Nodrum Gallery. Retrieved 19 March 2020.

Further reading

External links