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Title

'At peace that eve...'

1949

Artist

Ethleen Palmer

Australia

1908 – 1965

  • Details

    Date
    1949
    Media category
    Print
    Materials used
    colour screenprint on thick buff paper
    Edition
    proof from edition of 15
    Dimensions
    30.3 x 27.7 cm image; 47.9 x 38.8 cm sheet
    Signature & date

    Signed l.r., pencil "Ethleen Palmer". Dated l.l., pencil "... 1949 ...". Signed with monogram in composition to print l.r.

    Credit
    Gift of Norman and Daphne Mills 2000
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    311.2000
    Copyright
    © Estate of Ethleen Palmer

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    Artist information
    Ethleen Palmer

    Works in the collection

    11

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  • About

    Ethleen Palmer studied at East Sydney Technical College under Rayner Hoff and Phyllis Shillito from 1924-27 and began experimenting with relief printmaking in 1933.

    Major influences on her work were the Austrian artist Norbertine Bresslern-Roth, whose prints were shown in Sydney from 1926-28, and possibly the work of Claude Flight, whose work and teaching was so influential on Australian printmakers such as Dorrit Black, Eveline Syme and Ethel Spowers.

    She showed her first prints in 1933 at the Society of Arts and Crafts in Sydney, and continued to experiment with techniques throughout the decade. She developed a complex printing technique of subtly overlaying colour, producing prints strongly reminiscent of Japanese prints, both in composition and execution. By 1939 her work was represented in all major state collections. WWII caused a break in her output, but in the late 1940s she began experimenting with screenprints, one of the first artists in Australia to do so, and possibly the first in Sydney.

    Considerable interest has been shown towards Australian inter-war printmaking in recent years, but Ethleen Palmer's work has been somewhat overlooked. Nevertheless, her importance to the development of Australian printmaking, especially in screenprints and the adoption of a Japanese aesthetic deserves greater recognition.

    Australian Art Department, AGNSW, 2000

Other works by Ethleen Palmer

See all 11 works