1. ALBERT NAMATJIRA
In traditional landscape painting, trees are typically employed as a compositional device a means of framing a particular passage or view. In this watercolour by Albert Namatjira, the central tree has become a subject unto itself: we are presented with a portrait of an individual living entity.1 With its broad bare trunk, broken limbs and smooth, wrinkled bark, Namatjiras tree invites comparison with our own anatomy. It too bears the marks of age and experience, as seen in the lumpen rounded scars and blackened wood of severed branches. The trees anthropomorphic qualities are further accentuated by Namatjiras cropped and foreshortened perspective, such that the trunk acquires a monumental appearance, pressed up against the surrounding landscape.2
Namatjiras portraits of trees were prominently featured in the pivotal travelling exhibition, Seeing the Centre: The Art of Albert Namatjira 1902-1959, curated by Alison French for the National Gallery of Australia in 2002. The present work compares favourably with several of the watercolours included in the exhibition, such as Ghost Gum c1948 (gifted to the National Gallery of Australia in 2008) and Ghost Gum c1945-53 in the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin.3
Footnotes:
1. Saplings and Survivors: Portraits of Trees, in French, A., Seeing the Centre: The Art of Albert Namatjira 1902-1959, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2002, p.117
2. Ibid., p.117
3. As illus. in French, A., Seeing the Centre: The Art of Albert Namatjira 1902-1959, pp.124 125
Catherine Baxendale