Betty & Oswald Hall

Photo courtesy of Jim & Tricia Migdoll
Photo courtesy of Jim & Tricia Migdoll
Photo courtesy of Jim & Tricia Migdoll
Photo courtesy of Jim & Tricia Migdoll
Bhau's visit to Betty's  ( standing left of Bhau )
Bhau's visit to Betty's ( standing left of Bhau )

 

OSWALD HALL (1917–1991)

Oswald Hall studied at the National Gallery of Victoria

School between 1934 and 1938, a period when

European styles of modernism were being widely

discussed and debated. Cementing his allegiance and

interest in modernism, Hall was a founding member

and later council member of the Contemporary Art

Society in Melbourne. His work from the late-1930s

and during the 1940s reveals a wide range of interests

including abstraction, Surreal landscapes, social realist

tableau and tribal figure studies with an obvious debt to

Picasso. In the 1950s his work developed into an

expressionistic surrealism, combining many of his

earlier stylistic interests. His work has been widely

written about in the context of Australian surrealism

and is featured in the collections of the National Gallery

of Australia, Heide Museum of Modern Art and the

Agapitos/Wilson Collection.

His father was Bernard Hall, the noted painter and long

time director of the National Gallery of Victoria.

Literature/Further reading

Christopher Heathcote, Oswald Hall, Niagara Galleries

and Waverley City Gallery, Melbourne, 1991

Bruce James, Australian Surrealism: The

Agapitos/Wilson Collection, The Beagle Press, Sydney,

2003

Surrealism: Revolution By Night, National Gallery of

Australia, Canberra, 1993

Susan McCulloch, The New McCulloch’s Encyclopedia

of Australian Art, Australian Art Editions in association

with the Miengunyah Press, Melbourne, 2006

35 End of the dance 1959

oil on board

91 x 61cm

signed lower right: O Hall 59

Provenance

Private collection, Melbourne

Exhibited

Oswald Hall, Niagara Galleries, Melbourne,

25 Sep – 12 Oct 1991, cat.44

Oswald Hall, Waverley City Gallery, Melbourne,

24 Oct – 1 Dec 1991, cat.44

References

Christopher Heathcote, Oswald Hall, Niagara Galleries

and Waverley City Gallery, Melbourne, 1991, cat.44

(illus.)

Focusing on a central female figure, this composition

reveals Oswald Hall’s talents as a unique and

interesting expressionist painter. The woman appears to

have finished a dance routine and her face is clearly

strained. The physical exertion combined with the

emotions of the dance have exhausted her to the point

of angst. Her facial expression is a striking study, and

communicates great depth of emotion.

Around the standing female lead are four abstracted

bodies. Their faces have been left bare, the attention

focused on the rhythm and angle created by their

variously posed heads, torsos and limbs. The unusual

blue, green, yellow and red shades that outline the

figures adds to the intensity of the picture, its unnatural

hues signalling Hall’s keen interest in the various

movements of modern art.

Hall’s influences in this painting are remarkably varied.

There is a discernable interest in vorticism, an English

variation on cubism, Picasso’s use of Cubist or

abstracted forms to create a figurative expressionism

and social realism, which was an important

undercurrent in Australian art throughout the 1930s,

40s and 50s.

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