Brett Whiteley AO (1939-1992), artist, displayed a brilliant talent for drawing as a Sydney schoolboy. After studying very casually at art schools he travelled to Europe on a scholarship. In London he excited art dealers and fell under the influence of painters such as Francis Bacon, of whom he later made a series of portraits. He won the international prize at the second Paris Biennale for Young Artists in 1961, and married his muse, Wendy Julius, the following year. Through the 1960s he exhibited around the world as well as in Australia before the family returned to live in Lavender Bay. He began the 1970s with gentle pictures of birds, moving on to massive portraits of the poets Verlaine and Rimbaud before taking two years to paint the 18-panel Alchemy (1972-3). He then turned to series of paintings of waves, interiors, the harbour, and coastal landscapes. The glamorous Whiteleys' marriage was fiery, and their separation added to the artist's problems with substances and self-doubt. He died, apparently by accident, in a motel in Thirroul, NSW.
Gift of the artist 2003. Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program.
© Lewis Morley Archive LLC
Lewis Morley (49 portraits)
On one level The Companion talks about the most famous and frontline Australians, but on another it tells us about ourselves.
Sarah Engledow describes the fall-out once Brett Whiteley stuck Patrick White’s list of his loves and hates onto his great portrait of the writer.
Magda Keaney speaks with Lewis Morley about his photographic career and the major retrospective of his work on display at the NPG.