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One of
Australia’s greatest artists, Tucker was born on 29 December 1914 at 90
Francis Street, Yarraville, the youngest of three children to John Tucker a
railway worker and Clara née Davis; his paternal grandfather
Albert Edwin Tucker (Melbourne General Cemetery) was a politician and
prominent Fitzroy identity. Growing up as a kid of the depression era in
Malvern, Tucker left the local Spring Road state school at the age of
fifteen (“a lively, cocky kid”) with eyes set on becoming an artist; he
found work in commercial art at “Foy and Gibson’s” (“pure exploitation”) and
after a series of similar positions found it tedious and repetitive as a
career. Tucker’s training as an artist in the 1930s was informal, largely
self-taught and influenced by Marxism; fastidious, fearlessly independent
and self-absorbed with a combative personality, his first turning point came
in 1937 when he enrolled in art school, gave up full time work and achieved
critical public recognition at the Victorian Artists’ Society autumn
exhibition for “Self Portrait” (1937) (“confrontational, haunted and
passionately self-conscious”). But financial success eluded Tucker until
the early 1960s making for a long period of precarious living largely
supported by the generous patronage of John and Sunday Reed née
Baillieu who were both committed to modern contemporary art through the
creation of Heide (1935-81). Described as the ‘technician’ of the
1940s “Angry Penguins” group of artists that included
Arthur Boyd (q.v.),
John Perceval (q.v.), and
(Sir) Sidney Nolan (d 1992), Tucker’s paintings often focussed on the unrest
and savagery of the times. In 1941, he married fellow artist Joy Hester
(Box Hill Cemetery) (“sunny, casual and extrovert”); his self-absorption and
obsession with Hester during the ten years they were together would both
inspire Tucker’s art to a new level and leave an emotional labyrinth of
feelings in which his art would never fully recover from. His thirty-odd “Images
of Modern Evil” series (1943-47), depicting the sordid behaviour of
prostitution and soldiers on leave during WWII with its signature crescent
mouth icon are his greatest works of art; inspired by his reactions to his
time at Heidelberg Military Hospital during his short stint in the army
(“brutish, unsavoury environment”), the Leonski ‘brownout’ murders (May
1942) and the images of wartime Melbourne, the series “quivers with
ambivalence and sexual tension, pleasure and terror, fear and loathing”.
Hester’s sudden departure in 1947 left Tucker (“a man whom she respected
but was not in love with”) with a yearning to get away from Australia; he
spent the next thirteen years in Europe and America but financial success
continued to elude him. Still scrambling to survive as an artist with a
terrifying sense of failure, Tucker’s return to Australia in 1960 coincided
with the rise of commercial galleries and a boom in Australian art that
would deliver Tucker not just the financial success that had evaded him for
nearly three decades but also prominence and reputation in the art world.
But while his time overseas had hardened his resolve as an artist it had
also weakened his confidence and his art never reached the critical heights
of the “Images” series. Along with Nolan, Tucker popularised
modern art in Australia through his ‘antipodean images’ - Tucker with his “Explorer”
series (1958); and Nolan with the famed “Ned Kelly” paintings.
Shortly before his death on 23 October 1999, Tucker and his second wife
Barbara née Bilcock endowed the Heide Museum of Modern Art more than
two hundred works totalling $15 million. |
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(above) Albert Tucker
(By permission of the
National
Library of Australia, nla.pic-an23531481)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |