German-born Australian printmaker based in Melbourne
Hertha Kluge-Pott is a German-born Australian printmaker based in Melbourne.
Early life and education
Kluge-Pott was born in Berlin in 1934 into an upper-middle-class German family and studied at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste and Braunschweig from 1953 to 1958,[1] where she knew Gunter Grass who was studying graphics and was the student representative.[2]
Australia
Against her family's wishes Kluge-Pott migrated from Hamburg to Australia in 1958, aged 23, having graduated and after the death of her father. The ship on which she was traveling, the Skaubryn, caught fire on 1 April 1958, three days out of Colombo on the way to Perth, and passengers evacuated in life boats, watching as it burned, and in her case, with all her possessions. A cargo ship transferred them to another before their arrival on a Dutch vessel, which sank some time later. Recounting the adventure in a 1988 interview, Kluge-Pott recalled; "I arrived in Australia in a trance. I was 23, I had no money and no belongings. It took me a long time to find my identity in Australia."[2]
Settling in Melbourne, she studied at RMIT from 1960 to 1963 where her work in intaglio and other techniques was recognised, with two etchings included in the important early national touring exhibition 'Australian print survey', organised by the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1963.[3]
Style
Of Australia Kluge-Pott has said: "I think there is no other country like this. Words are too flat to describe it. It is frightening, threatening, beautiful [ ... ] I have been here for 30 years, and I know the work I do could not have been done anywhere else in the world but Terra Australis."[2] Her favoured technique is intaglio, with added textural qualities in drypoint.[4][5]
Reception
Writing in 1997 of Kluge-Pott's second solo exhibition at Australian Galleries in Melbourne, Jenny Zimmer writes;
Awesome is the word that best describes Hertha Kluge-Pott's recent etchings. Dark, brooding and passionate as ever, they echo oceanic moods and reverberate with the sparse coastal vegetation's harsh struggle with the elements around Cape Bridgewater and west into South Australia's sandy wind-swept Coorong. The artist, a born naturalist, enjoys a symbiotic relationship with sea and coast a union begun dramatically 40 years ago when the ship Skaubryn, on which she set out for Australia, went down in the Bay of Bengal. The prints, etchings and dry points are made with traditional methods learnt at the Berlin Academy. They can be read in numerous ways. Pages of a Survey is a series of eight small drypoints scratched directly on to the plates, probably while on field excursions. Recorded are tangled ti trees and other coastal plants grown dense and gnarled for protection against the ravages of nature. She interprets them as growing inward into complicated bundles of matter, their sturdy outline shapes darkened by detail that grows thicker and richer at each epicentre. Then she extracts a leaf, a pod, a flower or some other distinctive element and, placing it to one side, renders it precisely as if studied under a looking glass.[6]
Robert Nelson, though recognising her skilfulness, less understands what is relayed;
Imagery of Hertha Kluge-Pott is promising, teeming with vibrant life-forms and detail. Yet ... the earnest decoction of nature in mannered arrangements doesn't succeed in communicating much about the subject matter.[7]
Career
After traveling during 1964–65 to Spain, Italy and Germany, Kluge-Pott continued a career in printmaking, as well as teaching the medium. She established a printmaking workshop at the Melbourne State College in printmaking and drawing 1968–78, with breaks to practice and study overseas at Hamburg Academy of Art and to travel in Italy and the United Kingdom 1974–75, and then lectured at RMIT 1979–92,[8] where in 1985 she was made senior lecturer. She returned to RMIT to teach part-time 1993-4 and in 1995 at the Victorian College of the Arts, also part-time.
She held seven solo exhibitions 1972–90 in Melbourne including at Stuart Gerstman and Powell St galleries, in Brisbane, Canberra and Geelong.[9]
Alongside Graham King, Tate Adams and Udo Sellbach, Kluge-Pott was an early and significant member of the Print Council of Australia and she participated in their touring exhibitions and other group exhibitions including award exhibitions at Fremantle 1985–91; MPAC Spring Festival 1984, 86, 88, 90; Henri Worland, Warrnambool 1981, 87, 90, 91, 92.[9]
She was the 1996 Judge for the Silk Cut Acquisitive Award, Melbourne and in 2003 was appointed patron at the establishment of ‘Portland Bay Press’ print workshop & studio.
2020 Marking Out the Territory, Six Australian Printmakers, Rebecca Hossack Gallery, London, (Hertha Kluge-Pott with Janice Murray, Banduk Marika, Dennis Nona, David Frazer).
2019 ‘papermade’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne ‘Imprint: A Survey of the Print Council of Australia’, Parliament House Gallery, Parliament House of Australia, Canberra
‘Art Meets Nature’, presented by WAMA, The Atrium, Sofitel, Melbourne
‘Melbourne Modern: European art & design at RMIT since 1945’, RMIT Gallery, Melbourne 26 June 2019
2018 ‘Native Flora’, Silver Leaf Art Box, Merricks, VIC
2016 ‘Impressions’, Australian Print Workshop, Melbourne
2014 ‘International Print Exhibition, Australia and Japan’, Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, Japan; Fukuyama Museum of Art, Hiroshima, Japan
‘one of each’, Australian Galleries, Derby Street, Melbourne
2012-13 ‘Works from the Stock Rooms’, Australian Galleries, Smith Street, Melbourne
2011 ‘large exhibition of small works’, Australian Galleries, Roylston Street, Sydney
‘large exhibition of small works’, Australian Galleries, Derby Street, Melbourne
‘Nature of the Mark’, Australian Galleries, Smith Street, Melbourne
2010 ‘Summer stock show’, Australian Galleries, Smith Street, Melbourne
‘Artists’ Prints made with Integrity I’, Australian Galleries, Smith Street, Melbourne
2009-10 ‘Summer Stock Show’, Australian Galleries, Smith Street, Melbourne
2009 ‘Stock show’, Australian Galleries, Glenmore Road, Sydney
‘Artists’ ink: printmaking from the Warrnambool Art Gallery Collection, 1970-2001’, Ararat Regional Art Gallery, Ararat, VIC
2008 ‘Summer Stock Show’, Australian Galleries Smith Street, Melbourne
2006 ‘Marks and Motives: Prints from the PCA Collection QUT Art Museum, Brisbane
‘Summer Stock Show’, Australian Galleries Works on Paper, Melbourne
‘Bookish’, Australian Galleries Works on Paper, Melbourne
‘50th Anniversary Exhibition’, 5 June, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
2005 ‘Contemporary Works on Paper’, Australian Galleries Works on Paper, Melbourne
‘Notes from the Natural World’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
2004 ‘Surface Tension’, Twenty one contemporary Australian printmakers, New York Society of Etchers inc, New York, NY, USA; Gallery 101, Melbourne & Academy Gallery, University of Tasmania, Launceston, TAS
‘Contemporary Australian Prints’ from the collection, Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
‘Situate’, Prints from the collection, Warrnambool Art Gallery, Warrnambool, VIC
‘Artists’ Books and So…’, Grahame Galleries & Editions, Brisbane
‘Panorama’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
‘Species’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
2002 ‘Landscapes’, Australian Galleries, Sydney
‘Wild Nature in Contemporary Australian Art and Craft’, Jam Factory, Adelaide
2001 ‘Workings of the mind; Melbourne Prints 1960’s-1990’s, Heidi Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
‘Landscape and Environment’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
‘Contemporary Works on Paper’, Australian Galleries, Sydney
2000 ‘Australian Identities in Printmaking’, Wagga Wagga Regional Art Gallery, Wagga Wagga, NSW
‘Workings of the Mind; Melbourne Prints 1960s – 1990s’, Queensland University of Technology Art Museum, Brisbane
‘Prints, Drawings & Watercolours’, Australian Galleries, Melbourne
1999 ‘Rena Ellen Jones Memorial Print Award’, Warrnambool Art Gallery, Warrnambool, VIC
‘Australian Paper Awards’, George Adams Gallery, Victorian Arts Centre, Melbourne[7]
‘Australian Paper Awards’, Drill Hall Gallery, Canberra
‘Australian Paper Awards’, University of Technology, Ultimo, Sydney
1998-99 ‘Look Again: Contemporary prints and drawings from the collection’, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
1998 ‘Australian Prints from the Collection’, Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney
‘Fremantle Print Award Exhibition’, Fremantle, WA 26 June 2019
‘Decalogue’, Catalogue of 10 years of Australian Printmaking, Metropolitan Museum of Seoul, Korea
‘The Big Small Print Show’, Grahame Galleries & Editions, Brisbane
1997 ‘I Had a Dream’, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
‘Warrnambool Print Award’, Warrnambool Art Gallery, Warrnambool, VIC
‘Australian Printmedia Award Exhibition’, University of Western Sydney, Macarthur, NSW
1984 ‘Selected mini prints’, Print Council of Australia, Melbourne, Travelling Exhibition, Australian State Galleries, Japan AICHI Cultural Centre, OGISU Memorial Museum, Toyohashi City Museum
1983 Stuart Gerstman Galleries, Melbourne
‘Diamond Valley Art Award Exhibition’, Diamond Valley, VIC
^Grishin, Sasha; ‘Profiles in Print – Hertha Kluge-Pott’, Craft Arts International, No. 68, 2006
^Zimmer, Jenny (7 October 1997). "A geography of awesome art". The Age. p. 31.
^ abNelson, Robert (29 September 1999). "Visual art: Australian Paper Art Awards, George Adams Gallery, Victorian Arts Centre, until 3 October". The Age. Melbourne. p. 22.