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Details
- Place where the work was made
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Sydney
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New South Wales
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Australia
- Date
- 1970-1971
- Media category
- Materials used
- etching, printed in black ink on ivory laid paper
- Edition
- Trial proof
- Dimensions
- 30.3 x 45.2 cm platemark; 44.5 x 56.1 cm sheet
- Signature & date
Signed and dated l.l. corner to l.r. corner, pencil "Trial for Paper (not suitable for intaglio) ca. 1971. Signed E Rooney 1990".
- Credit
- Gift of Diana Rosewell 2022
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 111.2022
- Copyright
- © Estate of Elizabeth Rooney
- Artist information
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Elizabeth Rooney
Works in the collection
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About
Elizabeth Rooney was a major figure in the revival of printmaking in Sydney in the post-war period. Born in Sydney, she studied painting and drawing at East Sydney Technical College in the late 1940s, and towards the end of her studies began making etchings under the influence of one of her teachers, Herbert Gallop. She soon discovered that prints were her metier.
Unable to travel or study abroad and with printmaking in a moribund state locally, she was forced to teach herself how to make prints using the books of British printmaker S W Hayter (1901-88). Through discussions with other artists - her first etching press was given to her in 1954 by Bim Hilder - and experimentation with techniques and materials, she was to produce a distinctive oeuvre of over 400 etchings spanning more than five decades.
A key protagonist in the contemporary printmaking revival that occurred in Sydney in the early 1960s, she was a foundation member of the Sydney Printmakers group that included Henry Salkauskas, Earle Backen and Eva Kubbos, and a regular exhibitor with the Contemporary Art Society. Her work was included in the important ‘First Australia-wide graphic art exhibition’, an event that marked the beginning of the 1960s print revival in Australia. In 1961 she was co-founder with Joy Ewart, of the Workshop Arts Centre, Willoughby, an important community art workshop still in operation today.
Rooney’s prints were often bitingly satirical – she was interested in urban conservation and development, referring to the changing faces of Sydney and Newcastle in her work. An early phase of abstraction in the 1960s was something of an aberration, with the majority of her works executed with her trademark linear figuration.
This etching is a bucolic view of the Harbour from Mosman, in the tradition of Margaret Preston whose own images of the suburb evoked a particularly idyllic version of suburban Sydney life. It is a companion work to 'View from no.9 Warringah Road 2'.
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Places
Where the work was made
Sydney