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Details
- Date
- 1960
- Media category
- Watercolour
- Materials used
- watercolour on paper
- Dimensions
- 101.5 x 52.0 cm
- Signature & date
Signed and dated l.r.c., pencil "H. MAUDSEY '60'"
- Credit
- Purchased with funds provided by the Kathleen Buchanan May Bequest 2021
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 186.2021
- Copyright
- © Helen Maudsley
- Artist information
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Helen Maudsley
Works in the collection
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About
Helen Maudsley’s deeply autobiographical and complex paintings and drawings are reflections on human relationships and the surrounding world. Until 1967 she worked predominantly on paper due to space and time constraints caused by a lack of a personal studio; her work was characteristically figurative with a surreal inflection.
Her oil paintings, which she started painting in 1967 after taking over the studio of her husband, artist John Brack, are pictorial puzzles of intricate personal symbols and motifs, constructed into sophisticated and labyrinthine geometric compositions that share the slightly dreamlike and surreal spirit of her early works on paper. The paintings are composed of abstracted shapes formed from fragments of buildings, figures or landscape, with rich spatial depth and a sophisticated colour harmony. Maudsley sees these explorations of visual language and analogy as purposely ambiguous and refers to them as ‘visual essays’. She gives them poetic titles that give an insight into her thoughts, encouraging the viewer to open their mind to association and analogy in their reading of the work.
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
Helen Maudsley, Argus Gallery, Melbourne, 1961–1961