An image of Coquetry

Bernard Hall

(Australia 1859–1935)

Coquetry

Location
Not on display
Further information

Lindsay Bernard Hall was born at Liverpool, England, in 1859 and studied at the Royal College of Art in London and at the Antwerp and Munich Academies.

Hall was appointed Director of the National Gallery of Victoria in 1892 and its Art School, where he continued the Munich traditions established there by his predecessors George Follingsby and Eugen von Guérard.

His purchases for the Gallery under the terms of the Felton Bequest were both liberal and perceptive and included the masterpiece 'Boulevard Montmartre, Morning, Cloudy Weather' by Pissaro, selected from an exhibition of the artist's work held at London's Grafton Galleries in 1905.

In his own practice, Hall's preferred subjects were nudes, still lifes and interiors, of which his home provided numerous views for the artist to paint.

Hall was a member of the Victorian Artists' Society and regular exhibitor at the Society from 1893. He also held one-man exhibitions at the Athenaeum Hall, Melbourne.

Bernard Hall died in England in 1935.

© Australian Art Department, Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2003

Year
(circa 1918)
Media
Painting
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
61.0 x 47.0cm stretcher; 73.1 x 59.5 x 7.0cm frame
Signature & date
Signed u.l. corner, black oil "B.Hall". Not dated.
Credit
Gift of Mr F.G. White 1940
Accession number
7060