Thake was born in Auburn, Melbourne, on 8 June 1904, the only child of Emily Lockwood (née Doran) and Henry Thake, dairyman.[2] Educated at Auburn Primary School, at age fourteen at the end of WW1 he was apprenticed to a process engraving[3] firm Patterson Shugg.[4] He enrolled in 1921 at the Drawing School of the National Gallery of Victoria under traditionalist painter W. B. McInnes, then went on to study painting and drawing part-time with the modernist Melbourne artist George Bell from 1925 to 1928.[5] In 1935 he married Grace Bessie Doris Godfrey.
His first solo exhibition was held after the war at Georges Gallery, Melbourne, in 1947.
After the War Thake returned to Paton and was featured in advertising by a major client as No. 5 in Shell's "Australian Artists" Series, with a depiction of their refinery in Clyde.[10] By 1960 his work included illustrations for the Australian quarterly Manuscripts,[11][12][13][14] design works included the Australian Pavilion at the Wellington Centennial Exhibition in New Zealand that opened on 8 November 1939 at the outset of the Second World War,[15] covers for the literary journal Meanjin,[16] designs for stamps, and concise medical diagrams he produced in the course of his employment from 1956 in the University of Melbourne’s Visual Aids Department where he remained until his retirement.
Reception
Thake's work started being reviewed from June 1930 when he was twenty-six and had started exhibiting with the group calling themselves 'The Embryos.' Reviewing their show at The Little Gallery in Melbourne The Age notes that "Eric Thake follows up the new wood engraving movement, and... also shows a clever two-block lino print, Returned Empty and a decorative lunette design in color." While The Australasian merely noted that his fan design was "very clever,"[17] reviewer for The Herald, Blamire Young, singled Thake out for particular attention for his "power of design";
It is surprising that Eric Thake, whose power of design has been so universally recognised has not secured more patrons. Probably the reason is that his point of view is more difficult to grasp than that of his comrades. One feels that his artistic horizon is wider, his mentality more complex, and his sense of color and arrangement more exotic than we are accustomed to find in Australian artists.[18]
The Bulletin described his Across the Paddocks shown in the Victorian Arts and Crafts the Melbourne Town Hall in October 1930 as "a color cut of mushrooms that look as solid as tree stumps," [19] while Arthur Streeton in The Argus, in associating Thake's with Margaret Preston's prints, wrote deprecatingly that "they strike a different note, and ,,, may have their admirers."[20]
Legacy
McCulloch notes that "his sensitivity towards the dispossession of Aboriginal people in his works in particular has been brought to light since his death, and there has been a growing interest in his wonderful Christmas card linocuts, produced from 1941 to 1975.[21]
1935, September: with Kate Van Sommers and Adrian Lawlor.[32] Collegiate Galleries, 357 Little Collins St., Melbourne [33]
1946, June: R.A.A.F. Paintings. National Gallery of Victoria[34]
1978: Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900–1950, Deutscher Gallery
Posthumous
1988-9: The Great Australian Art Exhibition,Art Gallery of South Australia travelling exhibition, Queensland Art Gallery [2]. (17 May 1988 – 17 July 1988); Art Gallery of Western Australia. (13 August 1988 – 25 September 1988); Art Gallery Of South Australia. (23 May 1989 – 16 July 1989)
^Grant, Kirsty, "Thake, Eric Prentice Anchor (1904–1982)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 19 December 2022
^Dictionary of Occupational Terms : based on the classification of occupations used in the Census of population, 1921. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office. 1921. OCLC1158392529.
^Bunbury, Alisa (September 2020). "Windows, reflections and shadow play in the art of Eric Thake". The La Trobe Journal (105): 6–23.
^Bell, George (15 August 1933). "Eric Thake". Art in Australia. Third series (51): 39–40.
^Streeton, Arthur (9 July 1935). "Contemporary Group". The Argus. p. 5.
^"CONTEMPORARY ART: Exhibition at Geelong Grammar". The Argus. 8 November 1935. p. 8.
^Fry, Gavin, "Lawlor, Adrian (1889–1969)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 19 December 2022
^Lindsay, Lionel (18 September 1935). "Felt Rugs And Modernism". The Herald. Melbourne. p. 8.