We acknowledge the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Art Gallery of NSW stands.

Title

Pan

(1919)

Artist

Sydney Long

Australia, England

20 Aug 1871 – 23 Jan 1955

Artist profile

  • Details

    Place where the work was made
    London England
    Date
    (1919)
    Media category
    Print
    Materials used
    etching, aquatint, printed in brown ink on buff wove paper
    Edition
    18/30
    Dimensions
    28.0 x 42.2 cm platemark; 33.2 x 45.6 cm sheet
    Signature & date

    Signed l.r., pencil "Sid Long". Not dated.

    Credit
    Purchased 1969
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    DA44.1969
    Copyright
    © Estate of Sydney Long. Courtesy Ophthalmic Research Institute of Australia

    Reproduction requests

    Artist information
    Sydney Long

    Artist profile

    Works in the collection

    143

    Share
  • About

    Sydney Long was born at Goulburn, NSW and studied under A J Daplyn, Frank Mahoney and Julian Ashton at Art Society of NSW classes 1892-96. He was taught etching in London by Frank Emanuel and Malcolm Osborne and started to etch in earnest in 1918-19, devoting much of his time to it for the following twelve years. Sales of his etchings were his livelihood and helped establish his reputation in London. He was an Associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Honorary Secretary of the Society of Graphic Arts in London. Following his return to Australia in 1925, Long was elected President of the Australian Painter-Etchers Society.

    'Pan' is one of Long's best known early etchings and is closely related to a major painting, considered to be one of his early masterpieces, 'Pan' 1898 in the Gallery's collection. In a letter to his friend and Sydney agent, Adolph Albers, dated 25 April 1918 Sydney Long stated:

    'I am going to take up etching, have been intending to do so for some time, so I will be able to supply you with a bigger variety of subjects later. When I was in Cornwall I showed photographs of my work to Alfred Hartley who is one of the finest etchers in England. He advised me strongly to take up etching as my work would etch admirably, there being a decorative feeling for line in it. I was very interested in your account of the Lindsay etching from one of my landscapes and would very much like to see what he made of it but he hasn't sent the copy as you said he was going to'.

    Later (undated), 'I am going strong at etching and have already done several plates, so will pack you out some proofs. If there's any particular picture of mine you would like done, let me know. I have good reproductions of 'The spirit of the plains', 'Pan' and all the other Gallery pictures and intend to produce fair sized plates later of them in soft-ground and aquatint. In the meantime I am doing some stylish things of landscapes etc, of course I won't be able to send many until I get a printing press of my own but I will be able to send you proofs very shortly and perhaps you could book orders for them'.

    In 1919 he wrote, 'I am just finishing a large plate of the Pan pictures and also one going of the flamingos, a replica of the one in the gallery with the figures. I will send you along proofs as soon as they are done... The pan is on zinc and as zinc is very soft, won't yield more than thirty at most, so don't sell these proofs too cheap'. (Richard King, 'The etchings of Sydney Long, the Richard King collection', Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, 1990, pg.14)

    Hendrik Kolenberg and Anne Ryan, 'Australian prints from the Gallery's collection', AGNSW, 1998

  • Places

    Where the work was made

    London

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 4 exhibitions

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 13 publications

Other works by Sydney Long

See all 143 works