TEMPLE, WEST LAKE, HANGCHOW, 1936

The Estate of the late James O. Fairfax AC
Sydney
30 August 2017
5

IAN FAIRWEATHER

(1891 – 1974)
TEMPLE, WEST LAKE, HANGCHOW, 1936

oil and pencil on cardboard

51.5 x 58.5 cm

bears inscription with title verso: Temple Wash [sic] Lake / Hangchow

Estimate: 
$250,000 – 350,000
Sold for $549,000 (inc. BP) in Auction 50 - 30 August 2017, Sydney
Provenance

Redfern Gallery, London
Hon. Jasper Ridley, London, acquired from the above in January 1937
Christie’s, Sydney, 3 October 1973, lot 517 (as ‘Temple Wash Lake, Hangchow’)
The Estate of the late James O. Fairfax AC, New South Wales and Bridgestar Pty Ltd, Sydney

Exhibited

Recent Paintings by Ian Fairweather, Redfern Gallery, London, 7 – 30 January 1937, cat. 13 (label attached verso, as ‘Temple Wash Lake, Hangchow’)

Literature

Bail, M., ‘The Nostalgic Nomad’, Hemisphere, Canberra, vol. 27, no. 1, 1982, p. 57
Bail, M., Ian Fairweather, Bay Books, Sydney and London, 1981, cat. 43, pl. 21, pp. 56 (illus.), 233
Bail, M., Fairweather, Murdoch Books, Sydney and London, 2009, cat. 35, pl. 28, pp. 48, 49 (illus.), p. 247

Catalogue text

Ian Fairweather is one of the most truly original artists to have worked in Australia in the twentieth century. Although he is claimed as an Australian and spent many years of his life here – famously living in a shack on Bribie Island from 1953 until his death in 1974 – he was born in Scotland and undertook his formal art education at London’s Slade School of Fine Art. With a restless spirit, he travelled extensively – from London, to Canada, China, Bali, Australia, the Philippines, India and beyond – ‘always the outsider, the nostalgic nomad with a dreamlike memory of distant places and experience’.1

Fairweather’s first visit to China was in 1929, and he returned again to live in Beijing from 1935–36, but his interest in the art, culture and philosophy of the country began during World War I, when, held as a prisoner of war in Germany he had access to books including Ernest Fenollosa’s recently published Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art.2 He was inspired to study Mandarin after the war and it was a book on Chinese grammar printed in Shanghai, one of the few items he took with him upon leaving England for Canada in 1928, that prompted Fairweather to choose Shanghai as his next destination.3 Living there until late 1933 (when he left for Australia, making a nine month stopover in Bali on the way), Fairweather continued to study the language, worked in various jobs that earned him sufficient income to employ a servant and get around by rickshaw4, and travelled, sketching and painting the places he visited.

The city of Hangchow (the Romanised name for Hangzhou), renowned for its beautiful architecture and gardens, and historically, a favourite imperial retreat, had created an indelible impression on Fairweather and he often returned to it as a subject in his art. As Murray Bail observes, he had submitted to the Chinese proverb that, ‘In heaven there is paradise; on earth Soochow and Hangchow’5, joining the ranks of the many Chinese poets and painters who had been similarly inspired by the beauty and history of the area.

Fairweather’s second solo exhibition, held at Redfern Galleries, London in January 1937, included two images of Hangchow that he had painted from memory in late 1936 while living on the Philippine island of Mindanao. One of these was Temple, West Lake, Hangchow, which depicts a section of West Lake in the foreground and rising up on the hillside beyond, beneath an atmospheric blue sky, a series of temple buildings and courtyards. Characteristic of Fairweather’s work at the time, the quick pencil lines with which he sketched out the structure of the composition are visible beneath terracotta paint that describes the bridge and buildings in an almost purely linear form. Daubs of subtle colour, brushed and scumbled onto the surface, and gestural swirls in the sky, create a textural richness that contrasts with the areas of the painting’s ground that are left untouched, highlighting the importance for Fairweather of the act of painting itself.

1. Bail, M., ‘The Nostalgic Nomad’, Hemisphere, Canberra, vol. 27, no. 1, 1982, p. 54
2. Capon, J., ‘The China Years’, Bail, M., et. al., Fairweather, Art & Australia Books in association with Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 1994, p. 63
3. ibid.
4. ibid.
5. Bail, M., Fairweather, Murdoch Books, Sydney, revised edition 2009, p. 51

KIRSTY GRANT
Former Director of Heide Museum of Modern Art
Former Senior Curator, National Gallery of Victoria