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Auction archive: Lot number 38

RAY CROOKE (1922-2015) Boundary Rider

Estimate
A$30,000 - A$50,000
ca. US$21,754 - US$36,256
Price realised:
A$1,942
ca. US$1,408
Auction archive: Lot number 38

RAY CROOKE (1922-2015) Boundary Rider

Estimate
A$30,000 - A$50,000
ca. US$21,754 - US$36,256
Price realised:
A$1,942
ca. US$1,408
Beschreibung:

RAY CROOKE (1922-2015) Boundary Rider, Palmer River Country, North Queensland c.1970 oil on canvas laid on board signed lower right: R Crooke titled on gallery label verso 131 x 121cm PROVENANCE: Artarmon Galleries, Sydney (label verso) The National Australia Bank Art Collection (label verso) EXHIBITIONS: The Seventies: Australian Paintings and Tapestries from the Collection of National Australia Bank, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 15 October - 28 November 1982 LITERATURE: Lindsay, R. (ed.), The Seventies: Australian Paintings and Tapestries From the Collection of National Australia Bank, The National Bank of Australasia, Melbourne, 1982, pl. 27, p. 40 (illus.) OTHER NOTES: Ray Crooke travelled from his Yorkey's Knob base (near Cairns) to be part of an expedition (with artists Percy Trezise and Dick Roughsey, and an optometrist named Frank Woolston) sponsored by the Cooktown Historical Society in 1969. They retraced a track across the Great Dividing Range that led to the site of the Palmer River gold-fields which, for a brief time in the late 1800s, had brought people from all over the world to this remote place in Queensland. Rosemary Dobson writes, "He saw man's brief occupation of the landscape, not in terms of myth and drama, but as a transient incident now only perceptible in superficial traces"(1). Crooke had first experienced northern Australia and the Cape York peninsula as a soldier in 1942 during a journey from Western Australia to Queensland. His engagement with the essential qualities of this place subsequently drove many of his paintings of the Australian landscape. These essays on light and heat, vegetation and country have largely been overshadowed in the public view by his other colourful and lyrical depictions of the Torres Strait and Pacific Islands and their peoples. However, the landscapes and paintings such as Boundary Rider offer a powerfully different contribution, vignettes that evoke a sensory awareness of the temperature and tenor of these places, often featuring a solitary figure who waits. As curator Sue Smith writes, paintings from the Palmer River "convey a deep sense of the sometimes tenuous presence, and historic resonance, of Australians in the dry, inhospitable and vast expanses of the continent"(2). In Boundary Rider, Crooke's personal reticence is visible in the shadowed features of the Aboriginal rider, whose horse almost disappears into the shimmering heat of the landscape. The light on this grassy, forested hill is searing, and its dryness is reflected in the Giotto-influenced translucence of the paint, which evokes the intensity of the northern Australian environment. Writer George Johnston (the subject of Crooke's Archibald Prize-winning portrait in 1970) wrote a foreword to the Palmer River paintings exhibition held at the Johnstone Gallery in 1970 (10 July to 1 August). He suggests, "… [Crooke] has painted this [country] not representationally, nor even mythically, but I think metaphysically… He is concerned with a glimpsed, muted, immobile, strangely haunted landscape, where the flow of time past, and time present, and time eternal is an almost visible, portrayable thing"(3). Crooke was also aware of and sympathetic to the plight of Aboriginal people, and sensitive to his own contextual "ill-digested background of European culture"(4). His paintings become a response to "rightness of the Aborigine" in his own country (5). He suggested that, "His poetry, song, and dance is the country, yet it is not mine."(6) In this painting he places the Aboriginal stockman in Country, with a strong sense of the ongoing emotional resonance between this (and all) man and nature. Its narrative is elusive, working slowly on its viewer to conjure the atmospherics and environment of this place and its people, an uneasy but intriguing landscape into which we may project. The position of the rider on the far left hand side of the canvas and on the downward slope of the hill speaks to both its

Auction archive: Lot number 38
Auction:
Datum:
23 Feb 2022
Auction house:
Leonard Joel
333 Malvern Road
South Yarra, 3141 Melbourne, Victoria
Australia
info@leonardjoel.com.au
+61 (0)3 9826 4333
+61 (0)3 9826 4544
Beschreibung:

RAY CROOKE (1922-2015) Boundary Rider, Palmer River Country, North Queensland c.1970 oil on canvas laid on board signed lower right: R Crooke titled on gallery label verso 131 x 121cm PROVENANCE: Artarmon Galleries, Sydney (label verso) The National Australia Bank Art Collection (label verso) EXHIBITIONS: The Seventies: Australian Paintings and Tapestries from the Collection of National Australia Bank, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 15 October - 28 November 1982 LITERATURE: Lindsay, R. (ed.), The Seventies: Australian Paintings and Tapestries From the Collection of National Australia Bank, The National Bank of Australasia, Melbourne, 1982, pl. 27, p. 40 (illus.) OTHER NOTES: Ray Crooke travelled from his Yorkey's Knob base (near Cairns) to be part of an expedition (with artists Percy Trezise and Dick Roughsey, and an optometrist named Frank Woolston) sponsored by the Cooktown Historical Society in 1969. They retraced a track across the Great Dividing Range that led to the site of the Palmer River gold-fields which, for a brief time in the late 1800s, had brought people from all over the world to this remote place in Queensland. Rosemary Dobson writes, "He saw man's brief occupation of the landscape, not in terms of myth and drama, but as a transient incident now only perceptible in superficial traces"(1). Crooke had first experienced northern Australia and the Cape York peninsula as a soldier in 1942 during a journey from Western Australia to Queensland. His engagement with the essential qualities of this place subsequently drove many of his paintings of the Australian landscape. These essays on light and heat, vegetation and country have largely been overshadowed in the public view by his other colourful and lyrical depictions of the Torres Strait and Pacific Islands and their peoples. However, the landscapes and paintings such as Boundary Rider offer a powerfully different contribution, vignettes that evoke a sensory awareness of the temperature and tenor of these places, often featuring a solitary figure who waits. As curator Sue Smith writes, paintings from the Palmer River "convey a deep sense of the sometimes tenuous presence, and historic resonance, of Australians in the dry, inhospitable and vast expanses of the continent"(2). In Boundary Rider, Crooke's personal reticence is visible in the shadowed features of the Aboriginal rider, whose horse almost disappears into the shimmering heat of the landscape. The light on this grassy, forested hill is searing, and its dryness is reflected in the Giotto-influenced translucence of the paint, which evokes the intensity of the northern Australian environment. Writer George Johnston (the subject of Crooke's Archibald Prize-winning portrait in 1970) wrote a foreword to the Palmer River paintings exhibition held at the Johnstone Gallery in 1970 (10 July to 1 August). He suggests, "… [Crooke] has painted this [country] not representationally, nor even mythically, but I think metaphysically… He is concerned with a glimpsed, muted, immobile, strangely haunted landscape, where the flow of time past, and time present, and time eternal is an almost visible, portrayable thing"(3). Crooke was also aware of and sympathetic to the plight of Aboriginal people, and sensitive to his own contextual "ill-digested background of European culture"(4). His paintings become a response to "rightness of the Aborigine" in his own country (5). He suggested that, "His poetry, song, and dance is the country, yet it is not mine."(6) In this painting he places the Aboriginal stockman in Country, with a strong sense of the ongoing emotional resonance between this (and all) man and nature. Its narrative is elusive, working slowly on its viewer to conjure the atmospherics and environment of this place and its people, an uneasy but intriguing landscape into which we may project. The position of the rider on the far left hand side of the canvas and on the downward slope of the hill speaks to both its

Auction archive: Lot number 38
Auction:
Datum:
23 Feb 2022
Auction house:
Leonard Joel
333 Malvern Road
South Yarra, 3141 Melbourne, Victoria
Australia
info@leonardjoel.com.au
+61 (0)3 9826 4333
+61 (0)3 9826 4544
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