Buonarotti Club
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The Buonarotti Club was a bohemian artists' society in Melbourne, Australia between 1883 and 1887, associated with Heidelberg School of painters.


Foundation

The Buonarotti Club was established in May 1883 by Cyrus Mason (c. 1829 – 18 August 1915) and his colleague Edward Gilks, senior engravers. Professional painters joining them in the inaugural meeting in May 1883 included Fred M. Williams, Tom Humphrey, (later Sir) John Longstaff and Alexander Colquhoun, and also younger artists, the art teachers, John L. Himen, Theodore Dewey and Izett Watson. Mason was secretary of the charitable Victorian Art Unions 1872–75, engraver, draughtsman and artist who was publishing views and maps in coloured lithographs from mid-century. Through his membership of Melbourne's
Yorick Club The Yorick Club was a private social club in Lowell, Massachusetts, which twenty prominent young Lowell men founded in February 1882."History of Lowell and its people, Volume 1", p. 383, By Frederick William Coburn. The club went bankrupt in 1979 ...
, Mason was active in colonial literary, artistic and
bohemian Bohemian or Bohemians may refer to: *Anything of or relating to Bohemia Beer * National Bohemian, a brand brewed by Pabst * Bohemian, a brand of beer brewed by Molson Coors Culture and arts * Bohemianism, an unconventional lifestyle, origin ...
circles, and in the 1860s, was an illustrator for his friend Marcus Clarke, editor of the ''Colonial Monthly''. He proposed the name 'Buonarotti' in honour of Italian sculptor, painter, draughtsman and architect
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni (; 6 March 1475 – 18 February 1564), known as Michelangelo (), was an Italian sculptor, painter, architect, and poet of the High Renaissance. Born in the Republic of Florence, his work was insp ...
(1475–1564), in accord with a widespread revival of interest in Michelangelo then in Europe and Britain, the spelling "Buonarotti" being then generally accepted. The Renaissance hero excelled in a number of artistic media and was thus an appropriate figurehead for a club with multidisciplinary membership, with one, Brian Gilks, regarding him as their 'patron saint'. They met at the Prince's Bridge Hotel, now known as Young and Jackson's, on the corner of Swanston and
Flinders Flinders may refer to: Places Antarctica * Flinders Peak, near the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula Australia New South Wales * Flinders County, New South Wales * Shellharbour Junction railway station, Shellharbour * Flinders, New South Wa ...
streets. One of its owners was the art collector Henry Figsby Young (1845–1925), who decorated the hotel with nineteenth-century European and Australian paintings and displayed a selection of 'South Sea island weaponry' on the walls, making it an exciting and stimulating venue for aspiring bohemian artists and associates. After the club's early meetings at Young and Jackson's, the group continued at the Earl of Zetland also in Swanston Street, Sheehan's New Treasury Club Hotel on
Spring Street Spring Street may refer to: * Spring Street (Los Angeles), USA * Spring Street (Manhattan), New York City, USA * Spring Street, Melbourne, Australia * Spring Street, Singapore * Spring St (website), a US based lifestyle website Subway and trolle ...
, the Duke of Rothsay in Elizabeth Street and the newly established Melbourne Coffee Palace, Bourke Street.


Identity and activity

While other art societies were established around this time, including the
Victorian Academy of Arts 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 ...
(1870–1888), the Australian Artists Society (formed in 1886) and the Victorian Artists Society (1888), their purpose was the study and exhibition of art, while the Buonarotti Club was a unique entity. Club members joined one of three 'sections';'Artistic', 'Literary' and 'Musical', though most of its men and women were professional painters, including Frederick McCubbin, Louis Abrahams, Tom Roberts and
Jane Sutherland Jane Sutherland (26 December 1853 – 25 July 1928) was an Australian landscape painter who was part of the pioneering plein-air movement in Australia, and a member of the Heidelberg School. Her advocacy to advance the professional standing of fe ...
. It differed from the several other literary clubs and societies of Melbourne's 1880s, the Shakespeare Society, the Shelley Society, the Burns Society and the Lamb Society, in that it was artist-dominated, with members with professional goals, rather than amateurs, though it included emerging painters who came for critique and instruction from their peers, and opportunities to exhibit and to be received by Melbourne art world. Music and literature provided further topics for discussion. The character and reputation of its founding members established the club as being devoted to artistic development; experienced professionals providing guidance to the aspiring artist-teachers. A 1936 Adelaide ''News'' article notes that L. T. Luxton's ''Memories of Noted Artists'' "conveys the startling information that Sir John Longstaff in those days (the 'eighties) was a most brilliant performer on the piano and used to entertain the uonarottimembers regularly with recitals of a high classic order. This is news, for few of us were aware that he was a practitioner." The Luxton article further adds David Davies and E. Phillips Fox to its list of members. The Club enjoyed the patronage of a sophisticated following of art lovers and collectors through a quarterly '' conversazione'' (called sometimes 'The Ladies' Nights'), which took place in the prestigious Melbourne Coffee Palace. The programmes issued show that musical members sang or played (Mason himself was earlier the publisher of an original score ''The Song of the Bush'') while the Artistic Section exhibited new work. Guests partook of supper at one shilling per head and mingled with the members, who were identified by a maroon ribbon on their lapel and showed guests 'large numbers of paintings in oils and watercolours, portfolios of sketches and specimens of wood engraving'. These evenings followed on a smaller scale the lead of London's Grosvenor Gallery which in the 1870s had attracted art audiences to Grand Opening banquets, 'invitationals', Sunday openings, private views, at-homes and soirées. Similarly, the name of the Buonarotti Club is evidence of the group's imitation of the European revival of interest in Michelangelo. With reference to the old master's study of the human body and its movement, as discussed by Cyrus Mason in a Club lecture, life classes were conducted by the club. Member Alice Brotherton wrote and delivered poems in 1884 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Michelangelo's birth and his devotion to " art for art's sake", and devised the club's motto attributed to Michelangelo, ''Puolidie Addisco'' ('Still I learn'), while Rodney Cherry in 1885 lectured on a biography of the artist. Lecture topics ranged across discussion of the relative merits of professional and amateur art, the portrait, 'Art in Education' and beauty in art. Other members, including Mason presented progress on a personal project, or on other artists and intellectuals, with presentations about
Oliver Goldsmith Oliver Goldsmith (10 November 1728 – 4 April 1774) was an Anglo-Irish novelist, playwright, dramatist and poet, who is best known for his novel ''The Vicar of Wakefield'' (1766), his pastoral poem ''The Deserted Village'' (1770), and his pl ...
(also by Mason), Ralph Waldo Emerson (by Tudor St. George Tucker) and Professor William Denton (Henry B. Blanche). Alexander Colquhoun, in satirical verse, urged the Victorian National Gallery to hang French painter
Jules Lefebvre Jules Joseph Lefebvre (; 14 March 183624 February 1911) was a French figure painter, educator and theorist. Early life Lefebvre was born in Tournan-en-Brie, Seine-et-Marne, on 14 March 1836. He entered the École nationale supérieure des Be ...
's controversial 1875 nude '' Chloé'' loaned to it by its purchaser Dr Thomas Fitzgerald. The Club discussed the desirability of duty being charged on imported artworks. Tom Roberts promoted the role of professional artists in providing feedback to members on their work and in selection of works for exhibition. "The Buonarotti" Conversazione Programme for Tuesday, May 4th, 1886 offered; # Overture - ''Faust'' (Piano Duet and Flute Obligato) Miss Lynch; Mr. Bilton, and Mr. Kerr # Reading - ''Greeting'' (original Poem) Miss Brotherton # Song - ''Ernani Involami'' Miss Stirling # Piano Solo - ''March of Men of Harlech'' (original transcription) Mr. Hales # Song - ''Good-night'' (original, by Mr. L. Lavater) Mr. McCubbin # Flute Solo - ''Les Huguenots'' Mr. Kerr # Reading - 'Three Great Human Inventions' (original) Mr. Mason Interval For Refreshment. # Piano Duet - ''Une Nuit Etoilée'' (Serenade) Miss Lynch and Mr. Bilton # Song - ''Shipwrecked'' Mr J Himen # Reading - ''The Bachelor's Room'' (original) Miss Mason # Song - ''Good-night to Thee'' (original, by Mr. Bilton) Miss Stirling # Plano Solo - (1st movement of original sonata) .. Mr. L. Lavater # Reading - (Original Poem) .. Mr. Sutherland # Song - ''Helene'' Mr. Lynch # ''God save the Queen''


The Buonarotti Club and the Heidelberg School

Mead emphasises the priority of interests within the Buonarotti Club before they emerged in the Heidelberg School in that the Club encouraged its members to paint '' en plein air'' and established artists' camps prior to Tom Roberts, Fred McCubbin and Louis Abrahams (associates of the club) conducted such a camp at Houston's farm, near the present-day Melbourne suburb of Box Hill in 1885. He cites April 1884 when Club Secretary Rodney Cherry wrote to the Secretary for Railways requesting travel at reduced rates. Buonarotti Club artists who would later become members of the so-called Heidelberg School, exhibited ''plein air'' works and were subject to the influence of their peers in the club. McCubbin joined in 1883; Abrahams in 1884 and Roberts attended as a guest in June, September and November 1885, and was elected a member in January 1886. Members painting landscape in the open air included Fred Williams (1883–1884); Tudor St. George Tucker, 1884 and 1885; Walter Withers 1884; and Tom Humphrey late 1886 and early 1887. Buonarotti Club members camped and painted at Eaglemont contemporaneously with the early Heidelberg School period (1883–1887) and also at
Koo-Wee-Rup Swamp The Koo-Wee-Rup Swamp was a large freshwater swamp located to the south east of Melbourne, Victoria. It drained an area of West Gippsland, with several waterways including Cardinia Creek and the Bunyip River. The Koo-Wee-Rup swamp originally ...
, setting out from Mason's
Tynong Tynong is a town in Gippsland, Victoria, Australia, 66 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the Shire of Cardinia local government area. Tynong recorded a population of 523 at the 2021 census. Tynong was ...
estate. McCubbin, during his years of membership in the Buonarotti Club and his chairing of its art committee in 1884, and as Mead notes, painted ''Home Again'' (1884), ''Lost'' and ''Winter Evening, Hawthorn'' in 1886 and ''Moynes Bay, Beaumaris'' in 1887, and in the Melbourne suburb of Studley Park painted ''The Letter'' (1884), ''Picnic at Studley Park'' (1885), followed in 1886 by ''The Yarra, Studley Park'', ''Two Sisters on a Rocky Hillside'' and ''Sunset Glow''. Tom Roberts, also prolific while in the club, produced ''A Quiet Day on Darebin Creek'' in 1885, and in the next year ''The Artists' Camp'', ''Coming South'', ''Wood Splitters'' and ''A Summer Morning Tiff,'' then ''The Sunny South'' and ''Mentone'' in 1887. In the final year of the Buonarotti Club, Jane Sutherland painted ''Obstruction, Box Hill'' (1887). All are major works in the respective artists' careers. Member Alexander Colquhoun later contributed significantly to research into the early history of Australian art, and the Heidelberg School in early monographs on McCubbin (1919) and Walter Withers (1920).


Women artists

While the Club members were identified as adopting a bohemian persona and a devotion to Aestheticism, particularly the dandy
Tudor St George Tucker Tudor St George Tucker (28 April 1862 – 21 December 1906) was an English painter who spent a large part of his short life in Australia. He was best known for his landscapes and portraits of women. Biography He was the son of Captain Charlton ...
, and expressed an often extrovert and eccentric artistic fraternity and sense of humour, a more lasting and constructive impact was its promotion of women artists.
Humphrey McQueen Humphrey Dennis McQueen (born 26 June 1942) is an Australian political activist, socialist historian and cultural commentator. He is associated with the development of the Australian New Left. His most iconic work, ''A New Britannia'',McQueen, H ...
notes Jane Sutherland's chairing of its meetings, and Mary Eagle concurs that the Club played an important role in Sutherland's career at a period when she needed professional stimulation, describing the club as a 'place where art and intellectual ideas were debated without fear or favour'. Alice Chapman, Isobel (Iso) Rae,
Clara Southern Clara Southern (3 October 1860 – 15 December 1940) was an Australian artist associated with the Heidelberg School, also known as Australian Impressionism. She was active between the years 1883 and her death in 1940. Physically, Southern was t ...
and
May Vale May Vale (1862–1945), was an Australian painter. She was reportedly the first women to be elected a member of the Buonarotti Society. Biography Vale was born in Ballarat on 18 November 1862. Her family moved to Melbourne 1872. Her family the ...
, gained similar opportunities as Sutherland. While Clara Southern is usually described as 'among the first women to be elected to the Buonarotti Society in 1886' in fact while she did join in that year, several other female artists were already members and it was Alice Brotherton, sister of Winnie Brotherton who was the first woman elected to the Club in 1883 (and who married Rodney Cherry), followed by Sutherland and Vale, who both joined in 1884. Other Buonarotti members who joined in 1886 were the sculptor
Margaret Baskerville Margaret Francis Ellen Baskerville (14 September 1861–6 July 1930), was an Australian sculptor, water-colourist, and educator. She is regarded as Victoria's first professional woman sculptor. Biography Baskerville was born on 14 September 1 ...
, A. E. 'Lizzie' Oakley, and watercolourist Elizabeth Parsons, talented aspiring female artists active in the club's professional artistic environment, and welcomed as equals by their male counterparts.


Demise

The Buonarotti Club wound up in late 1887. Composer and member
Louis Lavater ] Louis Isidore Lavater (2 March 1867 – 22 May 1953) was an Australian composer and author born in Victoria (Australia), Victoria, of Swedish extraction. He published more than a hundred musical works. He prepared musical settings of popular f ...
regarded the lack of leadership by the Artistic Section as responsible for its demise after the loss of stalwarts Longstaff (left for London September 1887), Julian Gibbs (killed February 1887), and Cyrus Mason himself. The final
minutes Minutes, also known as minutes of meeting (abbreviation MoM), protocols or, informally, notes, are the instant written record of a meeting or hearing. They typically describe the events of the meeting and may include a list of attendees, a state ...
contain a 'Farewell' at the Coffee Palace on 23 August 1887, to John Longstaff who sailed to London. Over 30 attended, including Cyrus Mason, Elizabeth Parsons, Alice Brotherton, Jane Sutherland, McCubbin, Lavater, Abrahams, Humphrey, J. Llewellyn Jones, Altson and guest Arthur Streeton. ''The Australasian'' reported;
The Buonarotti — an artistic, literary, and musical club — held its monthly meeting on Wednesday evening at the Melbourne Coffee Palace. The attendance was large owing to the circumstance that before another meeting will take place Mr. Longstaff, an old comrade in the artistic section of the Buonarotti, will be on his voyage to Europe. The president, Mr. Cyrus Mason, referred to the many happy meetings held since 1883, when the club was founded, at which Mr. Longstaff had assisted, and said that he was the fifth comrade who had proceeded to Europe for the purposes of study. The president reminded the comrades that though the club was not a mutual admiration society, but founded for work and searching criticism, he felt justified in assuring Mr. Longstaff of the comrades' admiration of his work which had gained the National Gallery medal. Amongst other good music a song was well rendered by Miss Ridley. The words, by Miss Brotherton, spoke the farewell of the club to Mr. Longstaff, and the music was by Mr. L. Lavater.
From 1888, Tom Roberts conducted a series of '' conversaziones'' in the
Grosvenor Chambers Grosvenor Chambers, at number 9 Collins Street, Melbourne, contained the first custom-built complex of artists' studios in Australia. The construction costs were almost £6,000 and the building opened in April 1888. The owner was Charles Stewar ...
in Collins Street where he and other former members of the Buonarotti Club had studios, inviting other artists to bring their newest French and other art journals for coffee, song and discussion "in true Bohemian style." One such event in 1889 attracted two hundred guests including His Excellency the Acting-Governor
William C. F. Robinson Sir William Cleaver Francis Robinson (14 January 1834 – 2 May 1897) was an Irish colonial administrator and musical composer, who wrote several well-known songs. He was born in County Westmeath, Ireland, and was educated at home and at the ...
and Lady Robinson, "who expressed themselves as very pleased with the conversazione." Former member Elizabeth Parsons founded a similar club in 1889, known as Stray Leaves, comprising several ex-Buonarotti members.


Members and associates


References

{{Heidelberg School, state=collapsed Australian artist groups and collectives Australian art 1883 establishments in Australia 1887 disestablishments in Australia 1883 in art 1887 in art