Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing

Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing

by Ashleigh Wilson
Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing

Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing

by Ashleigh Wilson

eBook

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Overview

When he died in 1992 Brett Whiteley left behind decades of ceaseless activity—some works bound to a particular place or time, others that are masterpieces of light and line.

Whiteley had arrived in Europe in 1960 determined to make an impression. Before long he was the youngest artist to have work acquired by the Tate. With his wife, Wendy, and daughter, Arkie, Whiteley then immersed himself in bohemian New York. But within two years he fled, having failed to break through.

Back in Sydney, he soon became Australia’s most celebrated artist. He won the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman prizes in the same year—his prices soared, as did his fame. Among his friends were Francis Bacon and Patrick White, Billy Connolly and Dire Straits. Yet addiction was taking its toll: Whiteley struggled in vain to separate his talent from his disease, and an inglorious end approached.

Written with unprecedented behind-the-scenes access, and handsomely illustrated with classic Whiteley artworks, rare notebook sketches and candid family photos, this dazzling biography reveals for the first time the full portrait of a mercurial artist.

Ashleigh Wilson has been a journalist for almost two decades. He began his career at the Australian in Sydney before spending several years in Brisbane, covering everything from state politics to the Hollingworth crisis to indigenous affairs. He then moved north to become the paper's Darwin correspondent, a posting bookended by the Falconio murder trial and the Howard government’s intervention in remote Aboriginal communities. During that time he won a Walkley Award for reports on unethical behaviour in the Aboriginal art industry, a series that led to a Senate inquiry. He returned to Sydney in 2008 and has been the paper’s Arts Editor since 2011. He lives in Sydney.

‘Ashleigh Wilson has produced an intriguing, absorbing and assured account of Brett Whiteley’s life and work’. Mark Knopfler

‘With relentless precision, Ashleigh Wilson has provided a peerless grasp of the life and genius of Brett Whiteley. This storied journey of one of Australia’s most mercurial twentieth-century artists will be impossible for the reader to put aside until it is finished. It is the dispassionate biography Whiteley has long needed: a career clarified from the brilliant clouds of myth.’ Barry Pearce, Emeritus Curator of Australian Art at the Art Gallery of NSW

‘A full-dress life of Whiteley that speeds and soars and never ceases to do homage to the colossal confrontation and contradiction the artist represents…Wilson has written that rarest of things, a 400-page biography that is hard to put down…[It] will make you weep for this exasperation of a man and hunger for his art.’ Australian

‘An essential and invaluable resource for any Whiteley scholar...Wilson’s achievement is considerable...Ashleigh Wilson’s Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing is a benchmark publication in Whiteley studies.’ Sydney Review of Books

‘The best biography I read [this year] was Ashleigh Wilson’s Brett Whiteley: Art, Life and the Other Thing…Combines journalistic rigour and personal compassion his landmark account of one of our greatest artists.’ Australian

‘Ashleigh Wilson’s biography of Brett Whiteley is hard to put down. The narrative hums along beautifully, allowing readers a rare insight into Whiteley’s complex genius. A colossal undertaking, helped by extraordinary access. Wilson has delivered readers—and history—an absorbing, detailed and fascinating read.’ Walkley Magazine

‘Ashleigh Wilson methodically tracks this mercurial artist from early family days to his final years—a motley of sex, drugs and rock’n’roll, and importantly, art.’ Art Almanac


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781922253811
Publisher: The Text Publishing Company
Publication date: 08/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 432
File size: 27 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Ashleigh Wilson has been a journalist for almost two decades. He began his career at the Australian in Sydney before spending several years in Brisbane, covering everything from state politics to the Hollingworth crisis to indigenous affairs. He then moved north to become the paper's Darwin correspondent, a posting bookended by the Falconio murder trial and the Howard government's intervention in remote Aboriginal communities. During that time he won a Walkley Award for reports on unethical behaviour in the Aboriginal art industry, a series that led to a Senate inquiry. He returned to Sydney in 2008 and has been the paper's Arts Editor since 2011. He lives in Sydney.

Table of Contents

1. ‘An all absorbing interest’ 1
2. ‘I am knocked silly’ 17
3. ‘I am now in Modigliani’s country’ 37
4. ‘The Shirley Temple disguised as Holden Caulfield of modern painting’ 55
5. The binoculars tighten 79
6. ‘Sparks are absolutely flying off him’ 101
7. ‘Harkness the herald angels sing’ 129
8. The American Dream 139
9. Paradise lost 161

Plate Section 1

10. Brett Whiteley and friends 171
11. Portraits and other emergencies 197
12. Alchemy 211
13. ‘Nature tells you what to do’ 229
14. Art, Life and the Other Thing 255

Plate Section 2

15. ‘I am fighting the biggest struggle of my life’ 275
16. Drawing Joel Elenberg 293
17. Recent nudes 299
18. Money for nothing 315
19. Recovery 331
20. ‘One day at a time, one painting at a time’ 351
21. The impending collision 369

Plate Section 3

22. Fidgeting with infinity 385
Epilogue 403
Acknowledgments 413
Notes 417
Bibliography 437
Plate List 439
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