Twentieth-century Australian Modernist printmaker, painter and teacher
Jack Courier (1915–2007), a.k.a. John, was an Australian Modernist printmaker, painter and teacher.[1]
Early life and education
Courier was born in 1915 in Elwood, Victoria. As a young man he took various jobs including work as a salesman in country towns.[2]
He studied at the school established by George Bell and Arnold Shore at 443 Bourke Street, Melbourne, which became a centre for modernist art in Melbourne.[3][4] He exhibited with the George Bell Group in 1949 and with the Melbourne Contemporary Artists in 1952.[5] An early review by The Age art critic of the exhibition of the George Bell Group in their annual exhibition at the Victorian Artists' Society's Gallery, Albert Street, East Melbourne, noted that his painting The Red Chair was, and one by Peter Cox, were works "by younger men that impress".[6]
Career
Like other Australian printmakers, including Fred Williams, Ian Armstrong, Janet Dawson and Robert Grieve, Courier went to study abroad.[7] From 1950 to 1951 he travelled in Europe, then funded by a British Council Bursary returned to England 1954–1956 to study painting, drawing, lithography with Lynton Lamb and Ceri Richards and also etching at the Slade School.[1] On his return to Melbourne, he set up the first printmaking department at Prahran Technical School. Not long after his return he exhibited paintings, drawings and lithographs made in London at Peter Bray Gallery in March 1957. The Age art critic wrote of "the newcomer" as;
"an artist of Integrity and personal feeling. Working in the subdued English light he has evolved a low-toned, misty style in his oils, which leaves him little tonal range. But within the limits he allows himself he can create an effect of depth and space which enriches his quiet canvases [...] The color is deliberately unobtrusive, but it Is an organic part of these works," going on to remark on his skilful draughtsmanship to conclude that "he is almost certainly an artist to watch."[8]
The conservative magazine The Bulletin wryly commented;
"Jack Courier is a Melbourne artist who went to London and more-or-less starved there while he studied at the Slade School. He emerged therefrom with a technical equipment sufficient to enable him to produce lithographs and drawings of bits of old London with a line which is often heavy and unfeeling, but sometimes light and expressive. His oils have an elusive quality about them as if painted in the twilight."[9]
His friend and colleague Peter Jacobs organised the acquisition of Courier’s works by the National Gallery of Australia,[10] where Roger Butler, a senior curator remarked that "Jack is arguably Australia’s finest stone lithographer..."[11]
Courier was a foundation member of the Print Council of Australia and exhibited with them, including in touring shows.
Personal life
Later in life Courier married painter Mary McLeish, a member of the Women Painters and Sculptors society.[14] The couple exhibited together and she was frequently a finalist in the Archibald Prize. Mary's daughter was Barbara Courier McLeish (born 1936).[15]
^Williams, Fred, "Bell, George Frederick Henry (1878–1966)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2022-07-13
^Stocky, Catherine (2006). Jack Courier - master lithographer. Thesis (Master of Arts, Art History And Screen Studies ed.). Visual Cultures Resource Centre: Melbourne University.
^ abCourier, Jack; Stocky, Catherine; Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum (2009). Jack Courier (1915-2007): lithographs. Castlemaine, Vic.: Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. OCLC653970903.