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W. Lister Lister

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian painter (1859–1943)

W. Lister Lister
Born(1859-12-27)27 December 1859
Manly, Sydney
Died6 November 1943(1943-11-06) (aged 83)
Sydney

William Lister Lister (27 December 1859 – 6 November 1943) was an Australian painter who specialized in landscapes. He was awarded theWynne Prize seven times. He was also a recipient of a federal government prize for his painting of the federal capital site atCanberra. In some sources the two Listers are hyphenated.

Biography

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At the age of eight he moved with his parents toYorkshire, England; where his father was born. There, he studied atBedford School, then spent a year in Paris studying art. While there, his father changed the family name from Buttrey to Lister bydeed poll. From 1876 to 1880, he studied mechanical engineering at theCollege of Science and Arts and theFairfield Engineering Works, both inGlasgow, after which he became a ship's engineer. While studying, he joined the St. Mungo Art Club, founded by a Scottish cartoonist known asCynicus, and was soon exhibiting at theRoyal Scottish Academy, aged only seventeen.[1]

After four years at sea as a ship's engineer, he settled in London in 1884,[1] where he began painting professionally as well as teaching. During his stay there, he exhibited at theRoyal Society of British Artists, theRoyal Institute of Oil Painters and several others. He returned to Sydney in 1888 where he began producing the seascapes and coastal scenes for which he is best known. He joined theRoyal Art Society of New South Wales, and remained with that organization when several artists broke away to form the "Society of Artists, Sydney" in 1907.[1] During this time, he also became a trustee of theNational Art Gallery of New South Wales and served as vice-president from 1919 until his death.

In 1898 he had a successful showing at the Exhibition of Australian Art in theGrafton Galleries, London.[1] That same year, he received his first Wynne Prize. In 1899, he married Bessie Enid Jenkins, a divorcée. He was a regular exhibitor atAnthony Hordern's art gallery from 1919 to 1940.[1]Margaret Preston cited him as an early influence. He was known for his preference for very large canvases.

He was struck by a taxi cab driver inMosman; suffering severe head injuries from which he died a few hours later.[1][2] In his obituary in theSydney Morning Herald they made note of the fact that the driver was a woman. He was survived by a daughter. His wife had predeceased him in 1935.

Selected paintings

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Wynne Prize awards

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  • 1898 –The Last Gleam
  • 1906 –The Golden Splendour of the Bush
  • 1910 –Mid Song of Birds and Insects Murmuring
  • 1912 –Sydney Harbour
  • 1913 –Federal Capital Site
  • 1917 –Windswept Marshes
  • 1925 –Track through the Bush

References

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  1. ^abcdefAustralian Dictionary of Biography
  2. ^"Artist Killed By Taxi".The Sydney Morning Herald. NSW: National Library of Australia. 8 November 1943. p. 6. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  • McCulloch, Alan.Encyclopedia of Australian Art, Hutchinson Ltd London 1968. Page 332
  • McCulloch, Alan and Susan.Encyclopedia of Australian Art. 3rd Edition, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1994. Page 432
  • Campbell, Jean.Australian Watercolour Painters: 1780 to the Present Day. Craftsman House, Sydney, 1989. Page 336
  • Clifford-Smith, Silas. 'William Lister Lister', Dictionary of Australian Artists Online (peer-reviewed biography),[1], accessed 2010-01-02

External links

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