Ashleigh Wadman rediscovers the Australian characters represented with a kindly touch by the British portrait artist Leslie Ward for the society magazine Vanity Fair.
David Ward writes about the exhibition Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture on display at the National Portrait Gallery, Washington.
Angus Trumble provides poignant context for Aña Wojak’s portrait of Tony Carden.
David Gist steps beyond the public relations veneer of Australia’s official Vietnam War portrait photographs.
David Hansen’s tribute to his close friend, prince of words and former National Portrait Gallery director, the late Angus Trumble.
Barbara Blackman reflects on her experiences as a life model.
Sir Sidney Kidman (1857-1935) is inscribed in Australian legend as the ‘Cattle King’.
The story behind two colonial portraits; a lithograph of captain and convict John Knatchbull and newspaper illustration of Robert Lowe, Viscount Sherbrooke.
Joanna Gilmour explores the stories behind the ninteenth-century carte de visites of bushrangers Frank Gardiner and Fred Lowry.
Jude Rae contemplates the portrait commission.
Sarah Engledow bristles at the biographers’ neglect of Kitchener’s antipodean intervention.