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One of Australia’s most famous
and popular artists, McCubbin was
born on 25 February 1855 at
165 King Street, Melbourne,
the third of eight children to Alexander McCubbin (d 1877) and Annie née McWilliams;
his parents arrived in April 1853 from Curvan, Ayrshire, Scotland trying
their luck in the gold boom. After a formal education young Fred worked for
a time as a solicitor’s clerk where he was sacked for seeing a pantomime;
his father noted his artistic inclinations and found work as an apprentice
with a coach-painter. Around 1870, McCubbin was enrolled in the newly
formed Artisans’ School of Design at Trades Hall, Carlton then the only form
of art institution available but later joined the National Gallery of
Victoria. At the School of Design (1871-82) under Thomas Clark (c1814-1883)
and O. R. Campbell (St. Kilda Cemetery) he gained an appreciation of
life drawing; and later at the School of Painting (1877-85) under Eugene von
Guerard (1812-1901) and George Folingsby (Boroondara Cemetery) his
work was being highly acclaimed notably “Home Again” (1884) which won
the 1884 Student’s Exhibition and shows the Folingsby characteristics of
controlled lighting and dramatic subject matter. But while McCubbin
acknowledged Folingsby’s influence as “a great stimulus” who taught the
fundamentals of art his discouragement of open air painting somewhat
restrained McCubbin’s development. The turning point came one Saturday
afternoon in 1885. Tom Roberts (1856-1931) had just returned from overseas
and living in Fitzroy when the two went painting at Studley Park where
McCubbin wrote “for the first time I got awakened to the beauties of the
Australian landscape”; “Picnic at Studley Park” (1885) and its equal
focus on foliage and figures best illustrates this change. These outdoor
painting trips - to the farmlets of Box Hill, the banks of Gardner’s Creek,
the hills of Hawthorn and the beaches of Mentone - were joined by (Sir)
Arthur Streeton (Ferntree Gully Cemetery), Charles Conder (1868-1909)
amongst others and the famed Heidelberg School was born ushering in a period
of art uniquely Australian in spirit that was to continue for more than four
decades. Whereas Roberts excelled in landscape, McCubbin’s paintings
emphasised life. With an in depth attention to the subject in reflective
poses, McCubbin’s unique style captured the nostalgia of the bush life amid
the developments of the 19th century; amongst the classics include “The
Lost Child” (1886), “While the Billy Boils” (1888), “Down
on his luck” (1889), “On the Wallaby Track” (1896) and “The
Pioneer” (1904). In 1886, McCubbin was appointed drawing master at the
National Gallery (1886-1917) encouraging a generation of art students to
develop a style of their own including Clarice Beckett (New
Cheltenham Cemetery), Merric (q.v.)
and Penleigh Boyd (q.v.), the
sculptor Charles Gilbert (Coburg Cemetery),
James Quinn (St. Kilda Cemetery), Hugh Ramsay (St. Kilda
Cemetery), Reginald Sturgess (Williamstown Cemetery), and Jane
Sutherland (Box Hill Cemetery). Married to Annie née Moriarty on
5 March 1889, McCubbin resided at various locations including New Street,
Brighton before settling at The Studio - 42 Kensington Road, South
Yarra where he died on 20 December 1917 from pneumonia and heart disease
survived by his wife Annie née
Moriarty (d 1928), four sons and two daughters. Today, McCubbin's
works command spectacular prices. "Bush Idyll" (1893) sold for
$2.3 million in 1998; "Childhood Fancies" (1905) sold in 2007 for
$1.92 million the same year that "Sawing Timber" (1907) fetched $1.7
million. |
.jpg)
(above) Frederick
McCubbin
(La Trobe Picture Collection,
State Library of Victoria,
H38782/679)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |
|
Source:
ADB Volume 10 1891-1939 (Lat-Ner).
The Argus 21 December 1917.
The Age (on-line) 4 October 2008.
The Herald 20 December 1917.
Galbally, A., "Frederick McCubbin" (1981).
“Artists Footsteps” website -
(http://www.artistsfootsteps.com/html/McCubbin_biography.htm). |
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