Sunday, February 13, 2022

THE LOST ART OF GUMLEAF PAINTING

 

The  latest  list of  Douglas Stewart   Fine  Books  , Melbourne, included   this rarity , a  circa  1890 view of  Russell Falls, Tasmania ,painted on a  gumleaf ,   signed  by  artist  S. Wadsworth , which   sold  immediately.

Wonder if he was  related  to public servant   Walking  Jimmy  Wadsworth  who took part  in  walking events in Hong Kong  and  sparked  the idea  for the  annual  Northern Territory  Walkabout  organised by the Northern Territory  News ?

Information supplied by  the bookshop on the arcane art form  included the following :

Because of their brittle and ephemeral nature, genuine Australian gum leaf paintings from prior to the World War One period (especially nineteenth-century examples) are rare survivors. These exquisite miniature works are highly sought after by collectors of both Australian folk art and Australiana, as the medium comfortably crosses over genres. ‘Possibly the rarest of Australian collectables today, these examples of Australian popular or folk art are expressions of a remarkably innocent period of cultural isolation….’ (Vane Lindesay, Aussie-osities. Richmond, Vic. : Greenhouse, 1988, p. 99)

Alfred William Eustace (1820-1907), an English-born landscape painter, poet and taxidermist, is credited with being the first exponent of gum leaf painting in the Australian colonies. He first experimented with the medium as early as 1851-52, while in the Ovens District of northern Victoria. In 1869, a pair of his gum leaf paintings was exhibited in Melbourne at the Art and Art Treasures Exhibition, which would have brought the practice to widespread public attention.

Indeed, it became a popular folk art medium that remained in vogue in the colonies up until the 1890s. The preponderance of subjects in known nineteenth-century examples – such as the one offered here – are bush scenes.

(Later on, when Australian soldiers went to fight in the Middle East and Europe during World War l, there would be a huge revival in gum leaf painting: leaves decorated with motifs such as the kookaburra and kangaroo, along with patriotic messages, were a convenient and hugely popular type of memento from home that could be sent to loved-ones fighting overseas).

Two other examples of gum leaf paintings by S. Wadsworth – one a scene in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales and the other a Victorian landscape at dusk – are reproduced in Lindesay (ibid., pp. 98-99), who describes the gum leaf painting process thus: ‘The preparation for this socially fascinating pastime was simple indeed. When a suitably shaped living leaf was chosen – dead leaves were far too brittle – it was then left to dry, often pressed under a weight to prevent curling. It was then painted green all over, thus adding a fresh appearance and strength to the dry fibre. The decoration was finally added to the leaf in oil paint with a sable hair brush.’ (ibid. pp. 97 and 99).


Little  Darwin  came  across  the above   example of  a  postcard conveying best wishes for Christmas and the New Year  from  a woman in Adelaide   with  a   gumleaf  stitched  onto  an  outline  of  Australia  .

In an  interesting  autograph  album  started  in Scotland  in 1902 , seemingly at the beginning of a trip to  Australia and   New Zealand  , there  was  a  glued in  gumleaf  urging  a  return to  the  land of sunshine and  gumtrees. Pressed   botanical  specimens  included  a   Kiwi  fern