The AWI's first exhibition occurred at Hordern and Sons' art gallery in 1924.[1] A students' exhibition began in 1930. Until 1974, the AWI met in a variety of places and the annual exhibitions were held in different galleries. In that year, it received a grant enabling the AWI to rent space in a building on Sydney's Sussex Street. A reciprocal exhibition with the American Watercolor Society occurred in 1975, and in 1977, an AWI exhibition toured New Zealand. The international presence expanded to include Mexico City, Mexico; Spain; Vancouver, Canada; Hong Kong; and Korea (4th Asian Grand Watercolour Festival, Busan Biennale).[2]
AWI published its first book, Australian Watercolour Institute: 75th anniversary 1923–1998 on the occasion of its 75th anniversary in 1998. Its second book, The Australian Watercolour Institute: A Gallery of Australia's Finest Watercolours, was published in 2006.[8] The 2006 edition reproduces over 150 contemporary Australian watercolour works, as well as forty historical ones, and includes essays that document Australia's watercolouring history.[9]
References
^"Watercolor Painters". The Sun (Sydney). No. 4141. New South Wales, Australia. 9 February 1924. p. 6. Retrieved 29 January 2024 – via National Library of Australia.
Australian Watercolour Institute, & Pinson, P. (1998). Australian Watercolour Institute: 75th anniversary 1923-1998. Roseville, N.S.W.: Beagle Press for the Australian Watercolour Institute. ISBN0-947349-25-1
Pinson, P., Campbell, J., & Laverty, P. (2006). Australian Watercolour Institute: A Gallery of Australia's Finest Watercolours. Willoughby, N.S.W.: Phillip Mathews Book. ISBN0-9775532-0-5