Anzac Square, Brisbane & the beach – QAGOMA Blog

Betty Quelhurst (17 September 1919-2008) was born at Laidley, a rural town in the Lockyer Valley Region near Brisbane. Her commitment to art with her career spanning several decades was a significant presence to the art scene in Queensland, including her contribution as a teacher, and her generous philanthropy.

Focusing on recording life in Brisbane and the Gold Coast, Quelhurst mentioned about her work Palms, Anzac Square 1961 (illustrated): “When I was in Europe I was quite fascinated by the square, every city has a square, and when I came back I found that Brisbane had a square; Anzac Square. There were marvellous subjects for paintings to be found there. In fact I painted four pictures flat out there… I like this one because it leads the eye into the picture along the path, and it is decorative the way that the palms sort of branch out in the main stem from the left hand corner. It shows the life of people in the city, with people eating in the square, and walking along with their umbrellas and reading newspapers on the bench”.

Anzac Square looking towards the War Memorial 1968

Anzac Square looking towards the War Memorial, 1968 / BCC-B54-28879 / Courtesy: Brisbane City Council

Betty Quelhurst ‘Palms, Anzac Square’ 1961

Betty Quelhurst, Australia 1919-2008 / Palms, Anzac Square 1961 / Oil on canvas / 54.5 x 70.1cm / Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 1996 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Betty Quelhurst Estate

Contemporaries of Quelhurst painting in Brisbane are some of the most recognised Queensland artists — such as Margaret Olley (1923-2011), Margaret Cilento (1923-2006) and John Rigby (1922-2012) — who also depicted Brisbane’s buildings in their paintings. Quelhurst however chose an environment where people met in public spaces or their working environment, as with The convenience store, Breakfast Creek 1955 (illustrated) and Dry dock, South Brisbane 1962 (illustrated) .

It was the character and interaction of life in the suburbs that attracted the artist, with the focus of her work concentrated in south-east Queensland between Brisbane and Tugun, a beach-side coastal suburb of the Gold Coast where she lived for many years.

Betty Quelhurst ‘The convenience store, Breakfast Creek’ 1955

Betty Quelhurst, Australia 1919-2008 / The convenience store, Breakfast Creek 1955 / Oil on canvas / 55 x 76cm / Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 1997 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Betty Quelhurst Estate

Betty Quelhurst ‘Dry dock, South Brisbane’ 1962

Betty Quelhurst, Australia 1919-2008 / Dry dock, South Brisbane 1962 / Oil on cheesecloth on board / 68 x 80cm / Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 1997 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Betty Quelhurst Estate

Margaret Cilento ‘Old boatshed, West End, Brisbane’ 1946

Margaret Cilento, Australia 1923-2006 / Old boatshed, West End, Brisbane 1946 / Oil on board / 72.7 x 101cm / Bequest of Margaret Cilento through the QAG Foundation 2007 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Margaret Cilento Estate

John Rigby ‘Queen Street’ 1959

John Rigby, Australia 1922-2012 / Queen Street [Brisbane (from George Street, looking north)] 1959 / Oil on canvas on composition board / 92 x 121 cm / Gift of Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. 1960 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © QAGOMA

Margaret Olley ‘South Brisbane’ 1966

Margaret Olley, Australia 1923-2011 / South Brisbane 1966 / Ink and watercolour on paper / 38.5 x 49cm / Gift of the Margaret Olley Art Trust through the QAGOMA Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Margaret Olley Estate

The emphasis on the holiday lifestyle of the Gold Coast had been a major interest of Quelhurst from the mid-1950s. She remarked that “the Gold Coast has a character all of its own and Surfers Paradise, with its modern outlook, offers tremendous variety for painting”.

The depiction of ‘human theatre’ has been a consistent element in the artist’s work. For all the development of the Gold Coast throughout the 1960s there are remarkably few scenes depicting life on the beach. In Winter sun – Surfers Paradise Beach 1961 (illustrated) Quelhurst skillfully portrays the reason Surfers Paradise became such an important venue for southern tourists — the winter sun.

Betty Quelhurst ‘Winter sun – Surfers Paradise Beach’ 1961

Betty Quelhurst, Australia 1919-2008 / Winter sun – Surfers Paradise Beach 1961 / Oil on board / 88.5 x 119.1cm / Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 1996 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Betty Quelhurst Estate

Portraits and self-portraits have been consistent in Quelhurst’s output, and portraiture was still a valid form of expression during the 1950s before abstraction became the dominant mode of artistic exploration in Australia. The self-portrait Girl in the yellow straw hat 1956 (illustrated) is her largest in scale, the figure has a solidity and strong volumetric presence, while her gaze is challenging, almost defiant. The work is evidence of the academic training she received under William Dargie at the National Gallery School, Melbourne, where Dargie imparted a strong sense of tonal values to her work.

Betty Quelhurst ‘Girl in the yellow straw hat’ 1956

Betty Quelhurst, Australia 1919-2008 / Girl in the yellow straw hat 1956 / Oil on canvas / 92 x 66.5cm / Gift of the artist through the QAG Foundation 1997 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Betty Quelhurst Estate

Endnote
1 ‘A portrait of the Gold Coast: The art of Betty Quelhurst’. Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Surfers Paradise, 2001, p.19.

Curatorial extracts, research and supplementary material compiled by Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA

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