An exquisitely illustrated appraisal of Australia's 'greatest artist' that explores his fascination with China and its centrality to his body of work.
Ian Fairweather is one of the most significant twentieth-century artists to have worked in Australia. After a life of wandering, including time spent in China, Bali and the Philippines, Fairweather settled on Bribie Island, off the coast of Queensland, where he built his own house. In 1962 a leading art critic named him 'our greatest painter'
Fairweather is exceptional among modern artists for his experience of Chinese life and culture. He lived and worked in China for extended periods, learnt Chinese and published a book-length translation of the popular Chinese novel The Drunken Buddha (1965). From an early age Fairweather sought alternatives to art based on verisimilitude and single-point perspective. This led to a lifelong engagement with the principles of Chinese art and thought that profoundly shaped his own creative process.
Drawing on letters, interviews and other archival materials to shed new light on Fairweather's artistic practice, Claire Roberts brings…
Ian Fairweather is one of the most significant twentieth-century artists to have worked in Australia. After a life of wandering, including time spent in China, Bali and the Philippines, Fairweather settled on Bribie Island, off the coast of Queensland, where he built his own house. In 1962 a leading art critic named him 'our greatest painter'.
Fairweather is exceptional among modern artists for his experience of Chinese life and culture. He lived and worked in China for extended periods, learnt Chinese and published a book-length translation of the popular Chinese novel The Drunken Buddha (1965). From an early age Fairweather sought alternatives to art based on verisimilitude and single-point perspective. This led to a lifelong engagement with the principles of Chinese art and thought that profoundly shaped his own creative process.
Drawing on letters, interviews and other archival materials to shed new light on Fairweather's artistic practice, Claire Roberts brings her own extensive knowledge of Chinese language and art to this absorbing re-examination of a revered artist. Fairweather and China shows how central the China experience is to his emergence as a key transcultural figure, connecting British, European, Chinese and Australian art histories in new and visionary ways.
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Meticulous and forensic.”
Canberra Times
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A thoughtful text that allows the reader to gaze at the constellation of circumstances and experiences that animate an impressive artistic journey.”
Australian Book Review
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Fairweather’s adventures and his life in general make for the stuff of myth ... a fascinating read about an equally fascinating man”
Courier Mail
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Fairweather and China is a marvellous tribute to an artist whose work repays repeated viewing and who may yet be discovered by the rest of the world”
Garland Magazine
Claire Roberts
Claire Roberts is an ARC Future Fellow, art historian and curator specialising in modern and contemporary Chinese art, and the cultural flows between Australia and Asia. She is Associate Professor of Art History and Curatorship in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. Roberts' curated exhibitions include 'Xiao Lu: Impossible Dialogue' at 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, Sydney, 'Go Figure…
Cooking Sections art collective, Ian Fairweather in China
Ian Fairweather famously paddled a raft to Indonesia to escape Australia, but his attraction to Asia was focused further north, in China. Claire Roberts’s book Fairweather and China delves into the legendary artist’s real-world encounters with Chinese art and culture.