Brack attended evening classes at the National Gallery School from 1938-40. He enlisted in the army in 1940 and was assigned to the Artillery Corps in Western Australia. He was commissioned in 1943 and appointed to heavy artillery, later assigned to a field artillery unit bound for Papua New Guinea. Discharged from the army in 1946, Brack returned to the National Gallery School as a full-time student under the Commonwealth Retraining Scheme.
From 1947-48 he shared a Melbourne studio with Fred Williams, a fellow Gallery School student. In 1948 he married fellow student and in 1949, he started depicting the life he saw. In a stark setting portrayed in ordinary colours, the artist documented the widely-known scenes of life in Australia, painting with a sense of humour and a distinct personal comment on the matter. The paintings from this era were visual, satirical comments on the post-war years, striving towards the Australian Dream.
I wrote that Brack had a style that evolved into simple paintings filled with plain areas of ordinary colours. After WW2 we Australians were not a flashy people, so his style was appropriate to contemporary Australian culture. Brack’s priority was to paint the human condition i.e the effect on appearance of environment and behaviour. Note the chiselled planes on their faces and bodies.
More than any other Australian artist of his generation, Brack was a painter of modern life - its realism, self-reflection and a strong sense of alienation, marked by typically Australian dry humour.
John Brack, Yellow Legs, 1969,
74 x 99 cm,
sold for $1.2 million.
John Brack, Back and Fronts, 1969,
116 x 164 cm
sold for $1.8 million in 2014
In 1959 the Antipodeans Group consisted of 7 artists and art historian Bernard Smith, who compiled The Antipodean Manifesto, a declaration fashioned from the artists' commitment to modern, figurative art. The artists were John Brack, Charles Blackman, Arthur Boyd, David Boyd, John Perceval and Clifton Pugh (all from Melbourne) and Robert Dickerson from Sydney. It may not have had an enormous impact at home, but works by group members were included in a 1961 exhibition in the Whitechapel Gallery in London. Called Recent Australian Painting, the Antipodeans felt justified by this show which established a national identity for contemporary Australian art.
Giving an insight to the modern life in Australia, Brack’s 1950s and 60s paintings were personal, humorously and Australian. Some of his works demonstrated his special qualities as a draughtsman and some showed his fascination with the human body. But the generalised nature of Brack’s nudes was heightened by stylisation of the figure, reducing individual features.
John Brack, The Old Time, 1969,
163 x 129 cm
Tarra Warra Museum of Art collection.
Sold in 2007 for $3.4 million, the highest price ever paid for a Brack painting.
168 x 205cm, 1969
National Gallery of Australia
Although the ballroom theme had long sparked Brack’s attention, it was not until late 1967 that he began to seriously gather material for the celebrated series, subscribing to The Australasian Dancing Times and going to World Ballroom Dancing Competitions held in Melbourne. He was attracted to the subject for its sheer absurdity; he was fascinated by the idea of people who turned pleasure into the hard labour seen in professional ballroom dancing.
In 1962 Brack became Head of the National Gallery Art School, a position he held until 1968. When he resigned from that job, he supported his family solely by working a professional artist.
Note the works in the Ballroom Dancing series, namely Yellow Legs, The Old Time, Backs and Fronts and Latin American Grand Final, all painted in 1969. While Brack drew upon wide ranging photographic material for most of his Ballroom Dancing series, it was only in these key works that he employed two photographs spliced together. Backs and Fronts presented two couples whirling through space on the dance floor, with a judgmental crowd of onlookers waiting behind. It could well have been the same man or the same woman being presented from the back and front, thus possibly highlighting the faceless dancing ritual.
Beyond a purely literal analysis of Brack’s design existed an arguably more compelling commentary upon the dance as a visual metaphor for life itself an allegory of the human condition in the vein of great European masters such as Goya and Munch. Depicting his dancers poised in difficult and exacting poses, balanced over highly polished floorboards with their reflections inviting imminent collapse, thus Brack exposes the extreme vulnerability and precariousness of the participants. Moreover, that they were tightly bonded together in relationships that were merely a well-rehearsed ritual, full of superficial glitter but no deeper meaning. Note Brack’s obsessions about people being alternately attracted and repelled, together intimately but separated in intention. About the rituals of art and life, in contesting circumstances.
Brack didn’t do ballroom dancing himself. But he watched and painted ballroom dancing because it enabled him to satirise a very insular and self-important art scene. Perfect!
Thank you to Deutscher and Hackett and Menzies for their invaluable material on Brack's ballroom dancing paintings.
9 comments:
Morning Helen Do you remember the Palais de Danse in StKilda? The gentlemen had to lead and the ladies had to look colourful.
It is hard to ever really have a favourite artist, but Brack is one of mine.
Deb
I remember the 1960s very well, and I remember when the Palais burned to the ground :(
I hadn't realised how self-important the ballroom art scene was, until I read the rules:
http://www.walternelson.com/dr/ballroom-guide
No wonder Brack found it a dream site to satirise.
Andrew
We all have favourites.. it is just a matter of being open to all sorts of views. But I doubt if Brack would have been loved before the 1960s. He was a great artist for our era.
The opposite is also true..we all have artists and musicians who we cannot tolerate. I got stuck into Wagner in a lecture yesterday and had to apologise to all the students for my intolerance :(
Hello Hels, John Brack is new to me. I just looked up some of his other works--he has a very British sense of humor, with perhaps a little Charles Addams thrown in. I am just finishing After the Ball by Ian Whitcomb, about 20th century trends in popular music. The 60's did have a lot of conservative holdouts (in America, think Mitch Miller and Lawrence Welk, among others), and ballroom never completely died, making the Brack series you present here doubly complex and ironic.
--Jim
p.s., I would have given the Wagner harangue, but not apologized for it! It is a perfect introduction to the theme of personal responsibility. If baseball players to set good examples cannot chew and spit tobacco, why can Wagner radiate hatred?
Parnassus
I think the late 40s and throughout the 50s were a struggle, in that horrible post WW2 era. The most important issues back then were recovering from war wounds (mental and physical), getting married, having babies and buying a small house.
On the other hand, the 1960s was an amazing decade, with new language, new clothes, new politics and new art. Vietnam was very divisive of course, but legislation leapt ahead re women's employment, contraception, free universities, end of White Australia Policy and the Beatles arriving! I acknowledge the conservative holdouts, of course, but those conservatives couldn't spoil the pleasure of the Baby Boomer generation living the life they wanted. Brett Whiteley was another hugely popular artist in that era.
The final painting, Latin American Grand Final, reminded me of Fragonard's The Swing, where a young man, seemingly innocent, is actually looking up the skirt of the lady on the swing. The reelection on the floor only shows us her shoes but one can imagine her partners seeing more! (Or I have I just got a dirty mind?)
CLICK HERE for Bazza’s currently comatose Blog ‘To Discover Ice’
bazza
not dirty.. just premature :) The smiles and glimpses in Latin American Grand Final were for the audience and the judges, not for the hardworking participants. Only after the function had finished might the partners go off by themselves for some private fun.
My parents went square dancing every weekend; it arrived in the early 1950s and invaded our ballrooms as well as local halls. But I can't find any Brack paintings of square dancing because it was too casual and not sexy enough.
Warrikon said:
Thanks :) re John Brack
Hels said:
Warrikon
I had written about Melbourne's own artist: John Brack way back in June 2009. They were great paintings from the 1950s, but this time I have selected very different works from a different decade. Enjoy
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