Thea Proctor

Thea Proctor
Born Alethea Mary Proctor
(1879-10-02)2 October 1879
Armidale, New South Wales, Australia
Died 29 July 1966(1966-07-29) (aged 86)
Potts Point, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality Australian
Education
Known for Painting

Alethea Mary Proctor (2 October 1879 – 29 July 1966) is an important Australian artist of the early twentieth century. She is also, together with Margaret Preston, Emily Kame Kngwarreye, and Grace Cossington Smith, one of the most famous female Australian artists.

History

Thea Proctor (as painted by George Lambert in 1903)

Proctor was born in Armidale, New South Wales, to Katherine Louise Proctor and William Consett Proctor who was a solicitor and a politician. When her parents separated in 1892, she and her mother moved to Bowral to stay with her grandmother who encouraged her interest in painting.[1]

She studied at Sydney Art School from 1896 under Julian Ashton, then at the St John's Wood School of Art in London in 1903. Ashton and Proctor became lifelong friends and she modelled for him many times.[2] Apart from two years spent in Sydney 1912–14 she worked in London 1903–21, associating with fellow Australian expatriates Charles Conder, Arthur Streeton and Tom Roberts and producing pencil drawings and decorative watercolours and fans influenced by Conder and Japanese woodblock prints. She exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts, and New English Art Club, later producing lithographs which were exhibited at the Senefelder Club and the London Goupil Gallery for the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers.[1]

After returning to Sydney, she exhibited with Margaret Preston in 1925 then with George Lambert founded the Contemporary Group who exhibited in Adrian Feint's Grosvenor Gallery in George Street from 1926–28 with Grace Cossington Smith, Marion Hall Best, Elioth Gruner, Margaret Preston, Roland Wakelin and Roy de Maistre.[3]

She taught Adrian Feint the techniques of woodblock-engraving 1926–28, and like her he produced covers for the Ure Smith magazine The Home. Later she taught linocut printing at Julian Ashton's Sydney Art School and drawing at the Society of Arts and Crafts of New South Wales.[1]

She and Margaret Preston were friends who exhibited together in Sydney and Melbourne until a precipitous bout of professional jealousy in 1925.[4]

Late in life she promoted the neglected work of her cousin John Peter Russell.

Two of several portraits by Lambert hangs in the Art Gallery of New South Wales.[1][5][6]

Recognition

Sources

References

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