logo
‘Fearless exploration': visionary Australian artist Janet Dawson gets her first retrospective aged 90

‘Fearless exploration': visionary Australian artist Janet Dawson gets her first retrospective aged 90

The Guardian19-07-2025
As a young child, artist Janet Dawson learned to see the world through her mother's eyes, the eyes of a woman who could find wonder in both the cosmos and the kitchen.
'She took me out in the early evening and explained the moon,' Dawson recalls, graciously holding court from her wheelchair at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW) on Friday. 'She taught me that the moon had a job to do – to rise and to return. She gave it purpose, and so I watched it carefully and waited for it every night.'
That nightly ritual sparked Dawson's lifelong fascination with contrast: the vastness of the sky against the intimacy of domestic life.
'It was my first idea of waiting for something big,' she says. 'And then we'd go into the kitchen – so small, so detailed.'
It is therefore fitting that her embarrassingly long-overdue first ever retrospective – at the age of 90 – is titled Janet Dawson: Far Away, So Close. The exhibition, spread across four rooms at the AGNSW, spans more than six decades of the Australian artist's work.
There are her teenage years at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School (at the precocious age of 11, she became the only child student accepted by realist painter H Septimus Power), and her formative years as an abstract painter while studying in the UK, France and Italy. And then her defiantly unconventional art practice built in conservative 1960s Melbourne, and her retreat to the quiet beauty of rural NSW, a property she shared with her husband, the theatre director and playwright Michael Boddy, in the 1970s.
A 1973 portrait of Boddy, who died at the couple's Scribble Rock property in the southern tablelands in 2014, saw Dawson become only the third female artist to win the Archibald prize.
'Janet Dawson is a rare figure in Australian art history,' the AGNSW's director, Maud Page, said at Friday's preview of Far Away, So Close. 'This exhibition shows that not only was she a formal innovator, but a deeply perceptive observer of the world around her, always alert to the play of light, energy, of nature and immediacy.
'It's a celebration of a visionary artist whose work continues to shape Australian art.'
Dawson's retrospective, which includes photos, media coverage and other ephemera as well as major works, moves across the four rooms chronologically.
'Janet was continuously rethinking and reworking ideas,' says curator Denise Mimmocchi. 'And so each stage of her career comes across as something very distinct.
'Someone said to me, it's like an exhibition of four different artists. But I like to think that there is a very strong thread throughout the four rooms … an incredible underlying energy to these works. They've got such power. I spend my time looking at a lot of paintings, and I don't think I've ever encountered ones that have this pulsating, underlying grab to them.'
Dawson's early mastery of tonal realism is evident in the very first work of the exhibition, an exquisite self-portrait she painted at just 18. To its immediate right, an inkling of what would become the mercurial nature of the artist's style – a post-cubist style pigeon, also painted around the same time.
A traveling art scholarship to Europe saw Dawson abandon realism and embrace abstraction. It was there that she 'started to understand her own visual language – one rooted in movement, emotion and fearless exploration,' says Mimmocchi.
When Dawson returned to Melbourne, she was a daring abstract female artist working in a conservative and male-dominated figurative art culture.
Large scale works in the 1960s, such as St George and the Dragon and The Origin of the Milky Way, soon earned Dawson the reputation of an artist who refused to stick to the rules. By the late 1960s she had embraced, then subverted, colour-field painting, whose most well-known proponent, Mark Rothko, championed wide swathes of unmodulated colour across expansive canvases.
Dawson soon began defying the flatness of the colour-field genre, says Mimmocchi, introducing in works such as Rollascape 2, an 'underlying pulsation of light', and making a style unmistakably her own.
A move to Sydney saw Dawson becoming increasingly captivated by the beauty of natural environments, with her series of ripple paintings evoking what at first appears to be panoramic ocean views, yet with a subtle reference to the geometric abstraction of her previous practice.
This marked a turning point for the artist, says Mimmocchi, which saw 'a closer immersion in the natural world – where fluctuations of light and atmosphere entered her abstract vocabulary.'
Her husband's work in Sydney expanded her oeuvre to theatre design, producing sets for Boddy's plays including The Legend of King O'Malley and Cash, and establishing a theatre in schools program.
Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning
'I was a working creature … living the art and living the drawing,' Dawson says, peering with delight into a display cabinet containing press clippings and theatre memorabilia from that time.
A job as a production assistant in the display department at the Australian Museum also expanded her interest in natural history. Her anatomical drawings of Australian fauna for the museum would go on to inform her detailed works of wildlife corpses, such as Hare on Blue, retrieved from Dawson and Boddy's rural property, Scribble Rock.
It was there that Dawson began creating her Scribble Rock Red Cabbage series, a collection of kitchen still lifes that was bought in its entirety by the National Gallery of Australia.
And it was at Scribble Rock where she returned to her haunting studies of the moon, which once again became her night-time companion.
For some works, she painted what she saw with the assistance of technology, such as the 2000 work Moon at Dawn through a Telescope.
'The moon has this beautiful poetry about it anyway, but Janet creates it into something beautifully glowing and energetic that is very difficult to harness in a painting,' Mimmocchi says,
At the age of 90, Dawson's exhibition is more than a retrospective. It is a celebration of a life lived through art, where nature and abstraction converge in luminous harmony, both informed by a keen and constant curiosity forged by a mother decades earlier, herself a talented artist who gave up painting to raise a family.
'But she never stopped teaching me, she showed me things constantly,' she says.
'And I think what that gave me was an openness of vision. I can look at anything and just look at it for itself. It doesn't necessarily have to be a thing to be hung on the wall. It is, of itself.'
Janet Dawson: Far Away, So Close is on at AGNSW until 18 January 2026
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why the AFL keeps smashing the NRL's grand final entertainment by attracting the world's biggest music stars
Why the AFL keeps smashing the NRL's grand final entertainment by attracting the world's biggest music stars

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Why the AFL keeps smashing the NRL's grand final entertainment by attracting the world's biggest music stars

The AFL and the NRL have been at loggerheads for years over who can bring in the biggest crowds, who can amass the most television viewers and which code can take the crown as Australia's biggest and most influential sport. Rugby league is known for taking innovative steps to grow the sport on the world stage. Take the league's recent exploits in Las Vegas, for example. NRL bosses Peter V'landys and Andrew Abdo have formulated a brilliant plan to pull in more viewers Stateside through the annual season-opening festival of rugby league in the entertainment capital. The AFL has also continued to innovate, too, and perhaps one thing that Andrew Dillon and Co do better than their rugby league counterparts is draw in big acts for its annual showpiece at the MCG. The latest of those is Snoop Dogg, who revealed on Tuesday that he will be the headline act for this year's pre-match entertainment for the AFL Grand Final on September 27. The self-proclaimed Western Bulldogs fan, who has hits including 'Drop It Like It's Hot', will follow a line of big names to perform in front of the 100,000 fans who will cram into the 'G for the event. In the past, the AFL has landed the likes of pop sensations, Katy Perry and Robbie Williams who got the iconic stadium bopping with their pop hits. The Killers and rock legends Kiss both took to the centre of the Oval, while Ed Sheeran belted out some of his famous tracks in 2014. The NRL, meanwhile, has also had its fair share of big names perform at its Grand Final, including Grammy nominees OneRepublic, Gang of Youths, and Macklemore. Comparatively, the AFL has certainly appeared to have more sway in luring global talents to Aussie shores for its Grand Final. And that, according to the Editor in Chief of Rolling Stone Magazine, Neil Griffiths, is down to the talent management teams the AFL and the NRL use to book their half-time shows. The NRL has also looked to highlight local Australian acts in the past, including Amy Shark and Jimmy Barnes. 'Sony Music Australia have had a monopoly on the NRL in recent years, so that is why you are seeing a lot of their acts,' Griffiths told The Daily Telegraph. Meanwhile, talent and tour promoter Mushroom Group handle the AFL's Grand Final bookings. 'Mushroom have taken care of a lot of the AFL entertainment, and they are a tour promoter so you are seeing their gigantic names who are about to announce a tour or start a tour,' he added. While the NRL have looked to give Australian musicians the chance to take the stage at the Grand Final, Griffiths believes that this isn't always a good thing. Artists by year Year NRL AFL 2025 TBC Snoop Dogg 2024 The Kid Laroi Katy Perry 2023 Tina Turner musical Kiss 2022 JImmy Barnes Robbie Williams 2021 INXS Kate Miller-Heidke 2020 Amy Shark Electric Fields 2019 OneRepublic Tones and I 2018 Gang of Youths Jimmy Barnes and Black Eyed Peas 2017 Macklemore The Killers 2016 Keith Urban, Richie Sambora Vance Joy It is understood that the AFL's ability to pull in global superstars is due to the agents the league uses to book their talent 'I remember a few years ago they had Richie Sambora playing the grand final and a lot of people actually hated it, despite the fact he is a big name, a lot of people had a big problem with the fact it wasn't local but then you have the situation where they book the local acts and people go 'who is this'.' The other issue that both codes face is availability. Both the AFL and NRL are set to miss out this year on a plethora of big names travelling Down Under. Oasis have rocked the UK at the beginning of their reunion tour and are set to do so in Australia, as they travel down to Australia for shows at the end of October and early November, while Lenny Kravitz is also set to tour Down Under at the same time.

Shocking war of words between hospo kings as MasterChef star opens Italian restaurant across the road from popular local trattoria - and the owner isn't pulling his punches
Shocking war of words between hospo kings as MasterChef star opens Italian restaurant across the road from popular local trattoria - and the owner isn't pulling his punches

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking war of words between hospo kings as MasterChef star opens Italian restaurant across the road from popular local trattoria - and the owner isn't pulling his punches

Sydney 's Double Bay is serving up more drama than an episode of MasterChef as a feud simmers between two hospitality heavyweights. Celebrity restaurateur Neil Perry had barely scraped the last dim sum off the floor of his failed Chinese eatery Song Bird before unveiling Gran Torino - a two-level Italian restaurant in the same location.

National Indigenous Music awards 2025: Emily Wurramara wins artist of the year
National Indigenous Music awards 2025: Emily Wurramara wins artist of the year

The Guardian

time32 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

National Indigenous Music awards 2025: Emily Wurramara wins artist of the year

Emily Wurramara expressed solidarity with the people of Palestine and 'all Indigenous peoples around the world' experiencing oppression as she accepted the artist of the year award at the 21st National Indigenous Music awards at the Nimas in Garramilla/Darwin on Saturday night. 'There's nothing like coming back home and being here and playing for mob and playing for the people,' the Garramilla-born Warnindhilyagwa singer said. 'Because the music is about the people. The music is freedom. Free Palestine, free Congo and free all Indigenous peoples around the world from their oppressors. It always was, always will be Indigenous land.' Speaking to Guardian Australia after the ceremony, Wurramara said: 'I've been very vocal about it online … advocating for [Palestinians] and Indigenous people all across the world - it's our fight.' Wurramara also picked up film clip of the year for Lordy Lordy, shot on Larrakia country, directed by Claudia Sangiorgi Dalimore and featuring the Northern Territory's Red Flag Dancers and members of Wurramara's family. Lordy Lordy was written during Australia's voice to parliament referendum. 'This song is a reminder that our people always have a voice, and always will,' the singer said. Malyangapa Barkindji rapper Barkaa, who won artist of the year at the 2024 Nimas, won album of the year for Big Tidda, her second EP, edging out fellow nominees Wurramara, 3%, King Stingray and Yolŋu funk outfit Andrew Gurruwiwi Band. The singer told Guardian the EP is 'for my tiddas - it's for my sisters, it's for the black matriarchy, it's for black women. It's a dedication to my mother, to my daughter, to my nieces, to my big sisters'. 'The Nimas are such a special night, because it's celebrating Black unity; celebrating all our brothers and sisters and countrymen from across this country, and just being able to come together. And you know, when one of us wins, we all win.' Sign up to Saved for Later Catch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tips after newsletter promotion Andrew Gurruwiwi Band, hailing from Yirrkala in north-east Arnhem Land, won best new talent and song of the year for their reggae-inflected protest song Once Upon A Time, addressing colonisation, the frontier wars and the Yolŋu fight for land rights. For the second year in a row, the community clip of the year, recognising young talent, was awarded to Bulman school and community in the NT, for their video Crocodile Style, in which local kids rap in English and Dalabon about the story of Korlomomo (crocodile) and Berrerdberred (rainbow bee eater) and how humans came to have fire. Jessica Mauboy, the Garramilla/Darwin-born, Kuku Yalanji and Wakaman singer and actor, was inducted into the Nimas hall of fame as part of this year's ceremony, joining the likes of Warumpi Band's Sammy Butcher, Yothu Yindi and the late Gurrumul. The award recognises Mauboy's success as a recording artist and her impact on Australian music. From her breakthrough on Australian Idol in 2006, she has blazed a trail with six Top 10 albums, 16 Top 20 singles – including chart-topping hits Burn and Little Things – and 31 Aria nominations. Last week she launched her new single, While I Got Time, co-written with PJ Harding – the first release on her independent imprint Jamally, following her exit from Warner Music Australia. Mauboy took to the stage to perform the new song, joining a lineup that included Barkaa, country star Troy Cassar-Daley, Donovan, psych-rockers Velvet Trip, gospel and blues vocalist Kankawa Nagarra, Eleanor Jawurlngali & Mick Turner, and best new talent nominees Miss Kaninna and Drifting Clouds. Reflecting on her 21-year career, Mauboy said: 'From humble beginnings in Darwin to the international stages, music has been my voice, my escape and my connection to the people all over the world. 'This hall of fame induction is not just about my achievements, but also about the message that I can send to young dreamers everywhere. I want every aspiring artist to know that their dreams are valid and attainable. No voice is too small, and every story is worth telling.' Guardian Australia travelled to Darwin courtesy of Tourism NT

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store