Anne Montgomery (artist)
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Anne Montgomery (1908-1991) artist, printmaker, muralist, lecturer was described in 2008 as "better known in art circles than by the general public". Yet for the first three decades of her life, she exhibited widely, received commissions and was bought by a number of public collections. She also is representative of a generation of Melbourne artists whose reputations were overshadowed by the publicity generated by the
Angry Penguins ''Angry Penguins'' was an art and literary journal founded in 1940 by surrealist poet Max Harris, at the age of 18. Originally based in Adelaide, the journal moved to Melbourne in 1942 once Harris joined the Heide Circle, a group of avant-garde p ...
and
Antipodean In geography, the antipode () of any spot on Earth is the point on Earth's surface diametrically opposite to it. A pair of points ''antipodal'' () to each other are situated such that a straight line connecting the two would pass through Ear ...
groups for themselves.


Childhood and influences

Anne Montgomery grew up in the centre of Melbourne's art and design circles Her father was William Montgomery, Melbourne's leading stained glass artist from the 1880s to the 1920s, President of the
Victorian Artists Society The Victorian Artists Society, which can trace its establishment to 1856 in Melbourne, promotes artistic education, art classes and gallery hire exhibition in Australia. It was formed in March 1888 when the Victorian Academy of Arts (previously Vi ...
, Trustee of the
National Gallery of Victoria The National Gallery of Victoria, popularly known as the NGV, is an art museum in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1861, it is Australia's oldest and most visited art museum. The NGV houses an encyclopedic art collection across two ...
and a keen advocate for the ideals of the Arts and Crafts Movement and the decor of the Montgomery home in
Sandringham, Melbourne Sandringham is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, south of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Bayside local government area. Sandringham recorded a population of 10,926 at the 2021 census. History Sand ...
, reflected this taste until it was sold in the early 1990s. William Montgomery was a close friend of Bernard Hall, artist and gallery director, and Anne spent much time with Hall's children from his second marriage. The Montgomeries joined Bernard Hall's summer painting landscape painting camps at
Rosebud Rosebud may refer to: * Rose bud, the bud of a rose flower Arts * The name of Jerry Garcia's guitar from 1990 until his death in 1995. * In the 1941 film ''Citizen Kane'', the last words of Charles Foster Kane and an overall plot device. * "Ros ...
. Her mother, May Rowed, was William Montgomery's younger second wife and a former student of the Melbourne National Gallery of Victoria School. Although marriage reduced her time for artwork, May Montgomery stayed in direct contact with many of the major women artists of Edwardian Melbourne, including Josephine Muntz Adams,
Jessie Traill Jessie Constance Alicia Traill (29 July 1881 – 15 May 1967) was an Australian printmaker. Trained by Frederick McCubbin at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School, and by painter and printmaker Frank Brangwyn in London, Traill worked in ...
,
Dora Wilson Dora Lynnell Wilson (31 August 1883 – 21 November 1946) was a British-born Australian artist, best known in her adopted country of Australia for her etchings and street scenes. Early life Dora Lynnell Wilson was born on 31 August 1883 in Newc ...
,
Violet Teague Violet Helen Evangeline Teague (21 February 1872 – 30 September 1951) was an Australian artist, noted for her painting and printmaking. Early life and training The only daughter of Melbourne homeopath James Teague and his wife Eliza Jane Mil ...
, Lillian White and the Sri-Lankan Australian artist Isabel van Stavern. She also painted oriental style flowerpieces and designed costumes for amateur theatricals, fancy dress balls and tableaux, including fundraising events during World War One for the Victorian Artist Society. Mother and daughter designed and made masks for the pastoral play at the 1932 Mayoral Ball in Melbourne organised by
Louise Hanson Dyer Louise Berta Mosson Hanson-Dyer (19 July 1884 – 9 November 1962) was an Australian music publisher and patron of the arts. Biography She was born Louise Berta Mosson Smith in Melbourne, the daughter of Louis Smith, a medical practitioner and p ...
for her brother Harold Glengoult Smith, when the Melbourne Town Hall was filled with autumn leaves gathered from Melbourne's parks and gardens. Although Anne Montgomery's early childhood was dominated by the death of her elder half-brother, artist Mont Montgomery, in action on the western front during the First World War, she grew up observing publicly active women artists, who became firstly role models and then later professional colleagues. In turn she began attending classes at the National Gallery of Victoria School under the directorship of Bernard Hall before she had finished secondary school at the Melbourne Church of England Girls Grammar School, the grounds of her old school later provided her with a subject for one of her etchings. Montgomery came second to Eileen Robertson in the 1932 Travelling Scholarship competition at the Gallery School.


Mural painting

Realising that she needed to turn her art skills to a more practical end and the need to support her widowed mother, Montgomery enrolled in architectural studies and
Napier Waller Mervyn Napier Waller CMG OBE (19 June 189330 March 1972) was a noted Australian muralist, mosaicist and painter in stained glass and other media. He is perhaps best known for the mosaics and stained glass for the Hall of Memory at the Aus ...
's mural painting classes. She was one of a group of his students who worked on the murals for Melbourne's
Grossi Florentino Grossi Florentino is one of Melbourne’s oldest restaurants. The upstairs Mural Room has been a fine-dining institution since the 1930s. History Florentino started out as a wine shop at 78 Bourke Street, bought by recent immigrant Samuel W ...
restaurant in 1934, This is one of her few surviving mural commissions, but the design and style of the works more strongly reflect Waller than any of his students. Anne Montgomery was listed as the leader of a group of students who painted murals in 1934 for the Children's ward at the After Care Hospital in Victoria Street, with art materials donated by Jessie Traill, She painted a number of murals from the 1930s to the 1950s, Most of her murals have been lost in demolitions or refits of buildings and included the large scenes of Greek Gods flanking the proscenium of the Civic Theatre Ashburton in Melbourne's Southeast, c 1947-8. By 1935 Montgomery was teaching occasionally in the Art School at the
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology RMIT University, officially the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology,, section 4(b) is a public research university in Melbourne, Australia. Founded in 1887 by Francis Ormond, RMIT began as a night school offering classes in art, scienc ...
and had moved c 1937 to the Architecture School where she would remain for 39 years, teaching watercolour and rendering techniques to Architecture students. Towards the end of the 1930s she began attending
George Bell George Bell may refer to: Law and politics * George Joseph Bell (1770–1843), Scottish jurist and legal author * George Alexander Bell (1856–1927), Canadian pioneer and Saskatchewan politician * George Bell (Canadian politician) (1869–1940) ...
's classes at his Burke Street school, although his teaching did not impact greatly on her artmaking until the later 1940s.


Printmaking

After she finished at the National Gallery School she spent several weeks with Jessie Traill learning etching, including spending time at Traill's Harkaway studio. She followed many of Jessie Traill's radical techniques such as experimenting with dramatic inking of the plates and also explored coloured effects and
aquatint Aquatint is an intaglio printmaking technique, a variant of etching that produces areas of tone rather than lines. For this reason it has mostly been used in conjunction with etching, to give both lines and shaded tone. It has also been used h ...
. However Anne Montgomery emphasised a more decorative fantasy approach to subject matter than Traill, with reference to
art nouveau Art Nouveau (; ) is an international style of art, architecture, and applied art, especially the decorative arts. The style is known by different names in different languages: in German, in Italian, in Catalan, and also known as the Modern ...
and
art deco Art Deco, short for the French ''Arts Décoratifs'', and sometimes just called Deco, is a style of visual arts, architecture, and product design, that first appeared in France in the 1910s (just before World War I), and flourished in the Unite ...
. She showed prints in a joint exhibition with
Helen Ogilvie Helen Elizabeth Ogilvie (4 May 1902, in Corowa – 1 August 1993, in Melbourne) was a twentieth-century Australian artist and gallery director, cartoonist, painter, printmaker and craftworker, best known for her early linocuts and woodcuts, and ...
in 1933. This tendency towards stylish fantasy linked into her practice of painting on silk and on the reverse of glass plates in the 1930s. Many of the latter survive but very few of her works on silk. Later she would also illustrate children's books with similar decorative styling. A few linocuts also date from the 1930s. Overall she appears to have stopped printmaking after the second world war.


Early success in the 1930s

The first decade of Anne Montgomery's career placed her as one of the most admired emerging artists in 1930s Melbourne, described in 1933 as "one of the white hopes" of Australian art by Harold Herbert, she exhibited widely in the
Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors The Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors, established in Melbourne, Victoria in 1902, is the oldest surviving women's art group in Australia. History The Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors (MSWPS) began in 1902 as a ...
, the
Victorian Artists Society The Victorian Artists Society, which can trace its establishment to 1856 in Melbourne, promotes artistic education, art classes and gallery hire exhibition in Australia. It was formed in March 1888 when the Victorian Academy of Arts (previously Vi ...
, the Arts and Crafts society, the New Melbourne Art Club, the
Australian Watercolour Institute The Australian Watercolour Institute (AWI) is a non-profit membership organization devoted to the advancement of watercolour painting in Australia. It was founded in 1923 by six painters in Sydney, and was modeled after the Royal Watercolour Soci ...
and the
Twenty Melbourne Painters Twenty Melbourne Painters Society is an Australian arts organisation that was established in 1918. The group split from the Victorian Artists Society to follow the Australian Tonalist Max Meldrum. Membership is restricted to 20 and is upon invitat ...
(as a guest). She established a studio in the Olderfleet buildings with
Lucy Newell Lucy Colgate Newell (29 September 1906 – 22 May 1987) was an Australian artist noted for painting and textile printing. Biography Newell was born in 1906 in Castlemaine, Victoria to artist Alice Newell and her husband Lt. Colonel Francis Sa ...
which became an important meeting place for many young artists in Melbourne including Treania Smith, Constance Coleman, Marna Pestell and Geoff Jones. William Pate recalled that Anne Montgomery's city studio was the location for sketching and drawing sessions during the 1930s. Montgomery, Newell and Traill toured Tasmania in 1935. Another colleague who shared her interest in the fanciful and decorative was potter
Klytie Pate Klytie Pate (20 October 1912 – 10 June 2010) was an Australian studio potter who emerged as an innovator in the use of unusual glazes and the extensive incising, piercing and ornamentation of earthenware pottery. She was one of a small group ...
and the two women held a well-received joint exhibition at Kozminsky Galleries, Melbourne in 1943 opened by opened by Harold Brown head of the art school at the Technical College. More unexpected contacts from her early working life were Merle and
Roger Kemp Francis Roderick Kemp AO, OBE, (Eaglehawk, 3 July 1908 - Melbourne 14 September 1987), known as Roger, was one of Australia's foremost practitioners of transcendental abstraction. Kemp developed a system of symbols and motifs which were deployed ...
. She painted Merle Kemp's portrait c1940 and knew both Merle and Roger Kemp through teaching at the Melbourne Technical College, later RMIT. By 1940, Montgomery's works had been acquired by the
National Gallery of Victoria The National Gallery of Victoria, popularly known as the NGV, is an art museum in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1861, it is Australia's oldest and most visited art museum. The NGV houses an encyclopedic art collection across two ...
, Castlemaine Art Gallery and the Howard Hinton collection (NERAM). A further purchase by the
Art Gallery of New South Wales The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW), founded as the New South Wales Academy of Art in 1872 and known as the National Art Gallery of New South Wales between 1883 and 1958, is located in The Domain, Sydney, Australia. It is the most importa ...
in 1940, has since been deaccessioned.


Later 1940s and onwards

Montgomery's public visibility rapidly changed in the 1940s. She became increasingly aligned with George Bell and his oppositional stance to the emerging expressionist and free-er aesthetic seen among the most radical Melbourne artists. Her public exhibitions were generally within Bell's circle and among his supporters, including the Melbourne Contemporary Artist group and the invitation-only George Bell group. The styles of Bell's later art school at Selbourne Road, Toorak, with the hard edged pictorial elements and flat synthetic cubism completely overwrote her earlier style. She was an enthusiastic and assiduous student and for most of the "homework" assignments that Bell set, Montgomery produced fully developed artworks, rather than sketches and provisional studies. Her colours became darker. arbitrary and more dramatic, often lending an overtone of
surrealism Surrealism is a cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists depicted unnerving, illogical scenes and developed techniques to allow the unconscious mind to express itself. Its aim was, according to l ...
to the Australian landscape. She painted in Victorian alps with Lucy Newell and Mollie Hill, who was based at Bright, both friends from the National Gallery School, camping in stockmen's and cross-country skier's huts. !n 1954 she was still painting several times a year at Mount Hotham. She also began to produce pastels in this later abstracting style, often with bright colours on dark-toned paper. The new building of the Lyceum Club in Ridgeway Place Melbourne, designed by
Ellison Harvie (Edythe) Ellison Harvie (18 May 1902 – 27 September 1984) was an Australian architect and an advocate for the professional development of women. In 1938, she became the first Australian woman to graduate with a Diploma of Architectural Design ...
and completed in 1959 included a large mural by Montgomery of Magnolias. During the postwar years Montgomery worked alongside and was friend of many of the major classical modernists of the 1950s including
Dorothy Mary Braund Dorothy Mary Braund (1926–2013) was an Australian post-war figuration and contemporary feminist artist, whose practice included painting, printmaking and teaching.
,
Nancy Grant Nancy Grant is a French-Québécois Canadian film producer. She was born in the small village of Petit-Matane, on the Gaspé Peninsula in the north of Quebec, Canada. She has produced multiple projects with several Quebec filmmakers includin ...
, Guelda Pyke,
Constance Stokes Constance Stokes (née Parkin, 22 February 1906 – 14 July 1991) was an Australian modernist painter who worked in Victoria. She trained at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School until 1929, winning a scholarship to continue her study at ...
,
Eveline Syme Eveline Syme (26 October 1888 – 6 June 1961) was an Australian artist associated with the Grosvenor School of Modern Art, and an advocate for women's post-secondary education. Early life Eveline Winifred Syme was born in Thames Ditton, Surrey, ...
(part of whose studio contents she inherited), Geoff Jones,
Frances Derham Frances is a French and English given name of Latin origin. In Latin the meaning of the name Frances is 'from France' or 'free one.' The male version of the name in English is Francis. The original Franciscus, meaning "Frenchman", comes from the F ...
,
Barbara Brash Barbara Nancy Brash (3 November 1925 – 25 February 1998) was a twentieth-century post-war Australian artist known for her painting and innovative printmaking. In an extensive career she contributed to the Melbourne Modernist art scene, beside o ...
and
Mary Cecil Allen Mary Cecil Allen (2 September 18937 April 1962) was an Australian artist, writer and lecturer. She lived most of her adult life in America, where she was known as Cecil Allen. Allen initially painted landscapes and portraits in her early career ...
. She also drew portraits of a number of these women artists; the portrait of Pyke is now at the State Library of Victoria. Helen Ogilvie, who was both a gallerist and a classical modernist, also validated Montgomery, who showed at Ogilvie's Peter Bray Gallery during the 1950s. Yet Montgomery and her family were too closely associated with Bernard Hall to enjoy the endorsement that Ogilvie enjoyed from Daryl Lindsay, Ursula Hoff and the Grimwades. With the death of George Bell in 1966, the promotion of classical modernism dissipated, critics beginning to think the academic cubism of Bell's circle was passé even by the mid 1950s, and thus Anne Montgomery's public status began to dwindle, along with many colleagues. Stylistically her work slowly defaulted to her earlier decorative style, and she continued to paint until the late 1980s. She returned frequently to her favorite subject, studies of the coastline around Sandringham, where she and her mother lived, Ricketts Point and Half Moon Bay, as well as decorative flower pieces, ti-tree, banksias and studies of Magnolias. These subjects sustained her from the late 1920s to the late 1980s, as she produced her last known works for the ''Form and Flowers,'' group exhibition in 1989 and the ''Alice 125'' exhibition in 1990. The growing curatorial interest in Bell's students saw Montgomery's work return to public sight. She was featured in the early comprehensive monograph on the George Bell School by Jan Minchin and Mary Eagle, 1981 and in Felicity St John Moore's survey of Bell and his students presented at the National Gallery of Victoria 1992, shortly after her death. In 1989 her work, along with that of other Bell pupils, Maidie McGowan and Marjorie Woolcock, toured to three Victorian regional galleries in the ''Form and Flowers'' Exhibition. Two posthumous survey exhibitions have been held, one in a Melbourne commercial gallery in 1992, which offered a large range of work for sale and another loan exhibition at the Lyceum Club in 2008.Anne Montgomery 1908-1991 retrospective exhibition Lyceum Club : 2 April - 14 May 2008 np Recently works have been acquired by other public collections including Ballarat, Bendigo, Geelong, the State Library of Victoria (gift of the Montgomery family) and the National Gallery of Australia (prints).


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Montgomery, Anne (artist) 20th-century Australian women artists 20th-century Australian artists 1908 births 1991 deaths Australian muralists Australian women muralists Artists from Melbourne People from Sandringham, Victoria National Gallery of Victoria Art School alumni People educated at Melbourne Girls Grammar