Rod Milgate

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Rodney Armour Milgate (30 June 1934 – 19 September 2014) was an

Channel 7
).

Biography

Rodney Armour Milgate was born at Kyogle, New South Wales on 30 June 1934.[2]

Milgate was considered one of Australia's most influential artists, especially during the 60s and 70s. His work is represented in major collections around the world and he had many solo exhibitions and awards for his work, including the

Blake Prize for Religious Art three times.[3] His play, A Refined Look at existence, first presented in February 1968, was described as "An ironic comedy drama which reworks Euripides' The Bacchae, set in a NSW country town. Daring in form, this was possibly the earliest play to capture the emotional turbulence that characterised the 1960s."[4] In 1960, he married Australian actress Dinah Shearing and the couple had two sons. Milgate retired to the Central Coast, north of Sydney, where he died on Friday, 19 September 2014.[5]

Selected work

Awards

  • 1964 John Fairfax Human Image Prize
  • 1966 Blake Prize for Religious Art
  • 1968 Harkness Fellowship (Commonwealth Fund, New York), two-year tenure
  • 1970 D' Arcy Morris Memorial Prize
  • 1972 Gold Coast Purchase Prize (jointly)
  • 1975 Blake Prize for Religious Art
  • 1977 Blake Prize for Religious Art (jointly with John Coburn)
  • 1978 Six month Residency, Owen Tooth Memorial Cottage, The Karolyi Foundation, Vence, France
Six month Residency, Studio Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris, France

Selected solo exhibitions

Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1965 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
South Yarra Galleries, Melbourne
Johnstone Galleries, Brisbane
Macquarie Galleries, Canberra
  • 1966 Commonwealth Institute Galleries (by invitation), Whitechapel, London
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
Macquarie Galleries, Canberra
  • 1967 Johnstone Galleries, Brisbane
Von Bertouch Galleries, Newcastle, NSW
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1969 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1970 Johnstone Galleries, Brisbane
Macquarie Galleries, Canberra
  • 1971 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1972 Johnstone Galleries, Brisbane
South Yarra Galleries, Melbourne
  • 1973 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
Macquarie Galleries, Canberra
  • 1974 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1976 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
  • 1977 Macquarie Galleries, Canberra
  • 1980 Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
St James Room, David Jones, Sydney
Touring exhibition, Phillip Bacon Galleries, Brisbane, and St Johns Cathedral, Brisbane
Solander Gallery, Canberra
  • 1982 Painters Gallery, Sydney
  • 1983 Barry Stern Exhibiting Gallery, Sydney
  • 1989 Bonython-Meadmore Gallery, Sydney
  • 1989 Long Gallery, Wollongong University, NSW (public exhibition of PhD presentation)
  • 1991 David Jones Art Gallery, Sydney
  • 1991–92 Fourteen Stations of the Cross (17 major oil paintings accompanied by poems read and recorded by Dinah Shearing and Ron Haddrick), toured Orange Regional Art Gallery,[6]
NSW; Dubbo Regional Art Gallery,
NSW; Noosa Art Gallery, Queensland
A Search for Meaning – Recent Paintings, Blaxland Galleries, Sydney
Poetics in the Paintings of Rod
Milgate, Manly Art Gallery Survey Exhibition, Sydney
  • 1994 Points of View, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales
  • 1995 The Art of Rod Milgate, Manly Art Gallery and Museum
  • 1996 Wagner Galleries, Sydney
  • 1998 Artarmon Galleries, Sydney
  • 2002 Journey into self, Gosford Regional Art Gallery, NSW
  • 2012 Allograph, Gosford Regional Art Gallery, NSW

Productions and writings

  • 1966 A Refined Look at Existence (three-act stage play), produced at Jane Street Theatre, University of New South Wales, Kensington, Sydney by Robin Lovejoy
Art composition: a contemporary view (book) Pub. Angus and Robertson, Sydney
"The nature of creativity". Commissioned article for October Hemisphere magazine. Pub. Commonwealth Office of education
  • 1968 At Least You Get Something Out of That, play commissioned by New South Wales Drama Foundation, produced at Old Tote Theatre Season of Australian plays (including revival of A Refined Look at Existence)
  • 1977 Grass Up to Your Ears and Buckets with Holes in Them (two stage plays)
  • 1978 Incident at Novala Beach (novel)
  • 1979 A Golden Pathway Through Europe selected for workshop production presentation at the
    Australian National Playwrights Conference, Australian National University
    , Canberra
Triage or the Fortunates (stage play) 'First Hearing', 'Australian Letters', 'Poet's Tongue' and 'Quality Street' broadcast on ABC National Radio
Pictures at an exhibition (book of poetry) Pub. Elizabethan Press, Sydney
  • 1980 A Golden Pathway Through Europe produced at Ensemble Theatre, Milsons Point, Sydney
Favourites (stage play)
  • 1981 Intruders and Destiny's Mill (two stage plays)
Grass Up to Your Ears selected for reading at the Australian National Playwrights Conference, Australian National University, Canberra
  • 1982 The Story of Larry Foley (film script)
  • 1983 'Work in Progress', ABC telefilm, The Creative Eye, series on Australian artists
Destiny's Mill selected for workshop production presentation at National Playwrights' Conference, Australian National University, Canberra
  • 1984 Triage or the Fortunates adapted for radio and accepted for production ABC Radio, Sydney

Wrote Archibald Prize (stage play)

The coming of dawn, An anthology Pub. The National Library of Poetry, Owing Mills, Maryland USA
'The Sound of Poetry', cassette recording, one of ten international poems selected and recorded by National Library of Poetry, Owing Mills MD, Maryland, USA

Acting appearances

References

  1. ^ Milgate, Rodney. "National Library References". Trove Archive. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Rodney Milgate". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  3. .
  4. .
  5. ^ "Artist and former TV newsreader Rodney Milgate dies". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  6. ^ Milgate, Rodney. "Exhibition Reference". Design & Art Australia. Design and Art Australia Online. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  7. ^ Vagg, Stephen (19 October 2020). "Forgotten Australian TV Plays – The Slaughter of St Teresa's Day". Filmink.