Gray Smith (13 February 1919 – 7 August 1990) was an Australian artist, poet and jeweller who was part of the Heide Circle.[1] While best known as the famous Australian artist Joy Hester's spouse,[2] his most productive artistic period came later while married to Joan Upward in the '60s and '70s. Smith's modernist paintings often featured isolated figures in Australian outback landscapes.[3]
Biography
Early life
Smith was born in Melbourne, Australia. At 14, he left school to study as an optician and studied art at night.[citation needed] He left Melbourne in 1939 to become a timber cutter in North Drummond, Victoria, sparking a life-long interest in the Australian bush and its folklore.[2]: 116
In 1943 he returned to Melbourne to study with the well-known artist and teacher Max Meldrum and to work in the family picture-framing shop.[4]: 442 He married Dorothy Yvonne Egan-Lee in 1944 and had a daughter, Gaie Jocelyn Smith, in 1945.
For his entire life, Smith had epilepsy which stopped him from working steady jobs and slowed his artistic output.[5]: 23
Artistic career
During the 1940s, Smith joined the artistic group that became known as the Heide Circle,[6]: 248 where philanthropists John and Sunday Reed supported artists so they could practice their art unencumbered by paid work.[7]
The Reeds also already considered the Smiths (Martin, Gray and their mother Elsie) as extended family.[6]: 442 Gray's brother Martin was a picture framer who regularly framed artwork for the Reeds.[citation needed] In addition to Gray's painting, Sunday and John encouraged his poetry. He published his poems in Ern Malley's Journal.[8][9][10]
In 1947, Smith fell in love with Joy Hester and eloped to Sydney.[7]: 193–196 While money was tight, this first year together marked an intense and productive period of painting and drawing by both artists.[11]: 55–58
After about a year, they returned to Melbourne, settling in Hurstbridge, then later moved to Box Hill where they could easier access medical treatment as Hester had Hodgkin lymphoma and Smith continued to struggle with epilepsy.[4]: 311 During this time in the country, Smith refined his solitary man in the bush motif drawing on his love of Australian myths and legends. As artist and critic Geoffrey de Groen put it, “Gray Smith's paintings are powerful expressions of the work ethic, and in particular, the man on the land. His paintings heighten the drama of ordinary situations.”[12]
Joy Hester's time with Smith (1947–1960) was her most productive when she produced the acclaimed series Faces, Love, and Sleep.[5]: 25 Smith and Hester had two children: Peregrine in 1951 and Fern in 1954. After being together for 12 years, the couple married on 11 November 1959 in Queens Street, Melbourne.[5]: 242
In 1958 John Reed established the Museum of Modern Art Australia and the Reeds donated their artworks as the foundation collection. This set includes 18 Gray Smith paintings.[13]
Smith and Hester lived a tumultuous yet on balance a happy life together, practising their art until Joy's death in 1960 from Hodgkin lymphoma.[5]
Gray and Joan Upward (née Davis) began a relationship, bringing their families together in Box Hill, Melbourne. Joan had two sons, Brett and Matthew from her marriage to artist Peter Upward. In November 1961, they all moved to Canberra.[14] Here, Smith began the most prolific period of his artistic career producing over 200 paintings.[citation needed] During this time, Joan did much of the historical research for Gray's artwork, notably the Canberry series.[15] In 1964, Joan and Gray's daughter Sheenagh was born.
The Reeds supported Smith and his family in many ways. For example, in 1958, John Reed sent one of Gray's paintings to the Museum of Modern Art director in New York.[6]: 577 [7]: 271 John also set up trusts for Gray, Peregrine and Fern and purchased them houses in Melbourne and Canberra.[6]: 553 Smith and John Reed corresponded with each other until Reed died, an extraordinary forty years of correspondence.[6]
In 1966, Smith submitted his portrait of Lady 'Molly' Huxley to the Canberra and Goulburn regional round of the Helena Rubinstein Portrait Prize in 1966 and was judged the regional winner and went into the finals.[16]
The French government invited fellow artist John Perceval and Smith to exhibit in Paris in 1967. The plan was to steam to Europe with Joan and their five children.[17] In the end, Perceval was unable to make the trip, and Arthur Wicks took his place, and they exhibited together in Paris.[18]
Smith contributed in many ways to Canberra life. He taught art to locals in his backyard. He helped children with disabilities learn to paint as part of their therapy.[19][6]: 553 He taught at the Canberra Technical College (forerunner to the Canberra School of Art).[20] And in 1971 and '72, Smith was The Canberra Times art critic, writing over 80 critiques of art shows in Canberra.
Smith died in Canberra on 7 August 1990 at his nursing home with his daughter Fern Smith by his side.[14]
Shumack, S., Smith, J. E., & Smith, Gray. (1967). An autobiography : or, Tales and legends of Canberra pioneers / Ed. by J.E. and Samuel Shumack ; [Illus. by Gray Smith] C. Canberra: A.N.U. pr.