| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Dr. Rick Kline - Dr John Christian Schiro DDS, FAGD and Dr Rick Kline DDS smiletexas.com |
Rick Amor (born 1948) is an Australian artist and figurative painter. He was an official war artist.
[edit] Life and workRick Amor was born in Frankston, Victoria, Australia. He has a certificate in art from the Caulfield Institute of Technology, and Associate Diploma in Painting from the National Gallery School, Melbourne. He began exhibiting at the Joseph Brown gallery in 1974. He has entered the Archibald Prize at least 11 times and been exhibited nine times. He has been the recipient of several Australia Council studio residencies, allowing him to work in London, New York and Barcelona. In 1999 he was one of the first Australian artists to be appointed as the Official War Artist to East Timor by the Australian War Memorial, and the first since the end of the Vietnam War. Rick has held over 40 solo exhibitions since first exhibiting at Joseph Brown Gallery in 1974 and has shown annually at Niagara Galleries for the past 20 years. A major survey exhibition of his paintings was curated by McClelland Gallery in 1990 and toured various regional galleries in Victoria and South Australia throughout 1990 and 1991. An exhibition of his prints toured various regional galleries in Victoria and Tasmania 1993-4.[1] In 1993 another exhibition mounted by Bendigo Art Gallery toured Australia. He still lives and works in Melbourne. He was interviewed in the 2005 Peter Berner documentary about the Archibald Prize called Loaded Brush. [edit] PaintingsHis work borrows heavily from the pictorial inheritance of Symbolism and Surrealism. There is always a poetic mystery and sense of menace, even in apparently journalistic work, such as the East Timor paintings. His major themes are the solitary watcher, figures at twilight, the vast emptiness of urban spaces and quiet mysterious interiors. His works resonate with powerful symbolism, and his landscapes in particular are full of disquieting atmosphere, with objects bathed in half light and shadows. A Sebastian Smee, a reviewer of Amor's latest retrospective exhibition, concluded that he was
[edit] SculptureSince the early '90s, he has also incorporated sculpture in his repertoire, generally bronze figures which he moulds at home, then has cast in foundry using the lost wax method. The National Gallery, Canberra, has purchased a two-metre-high bronze sculpture of a dog - "a made-up dog, a survivor"[3]. In November 2007 Rick Amor won the prestigious $100,000 McClelland Sculpture Award for his haunting work Relic.
[edit] CollectionsRick Amor is represented in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, the National Portrait Gallery, the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery and numerous state, regional and university collections throughout Australia. [edit] References
[edit] External links | |||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |