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Studio in the paddocks: Hilda Rix Nicholas

A work by Hilda Rix Nicholas
The bride (June Ashley-Wilson) c. 1938
 

HILDA Rix Nicholas may not be a household name in Australian art history, but she’s about to be, with a new Centenary-inspired exhibition opening at the National Portrait Gallery this week.

Born in Ballarat in 1889, she travelled widely overseas between 1907 and 1926 and achieved considerable success as an artist.

Back in Australia in 1927, she came to Canberra to paint on Red Hill and Mount Pleasant. She married and moved her paintings, costumes and elegant French furniture and fittings to the property ‘Knock along,’ near Delegate in the Monaro. Aged 46 and pregnant, she built a French provincial style studio connected to the house by a garden that she designed and planted herself.

Hilda Rix Nicholas was not part of any group, movement or set and her art is not assigned to any school, setting her apart from most Australian women artists of the first half of the 20th century.

She continued her art practice while helping run the farm and devoting herself to the physical, intellectual and aesthetic development of her son.

In “Paris to Monaro,” the artist’s paintings and drawings of family and friends in the Monaro landscape will be shown for the first time amongst artefacts, furniture, garments, souvenirs and ephemera brought directly from the studio at ‘Knock along.’

Her studio still stands in the paddocks—as the gallery says, “its mediaeval fireplace, musicians’ gallery and pantomime stage unchanged, its canvases rolled and its drawers of art materials undisturbed.” Part of this  incongruous space will be recreated at full scale in the show.

“Paris to Monaro: pleasures from the studio of Hilda Rix Nicholas,” at the National Portrait Gallery May 31 to August 11.

 

 

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Helen Musa

Helen Musa

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One Response to Studio in the paddocks: Hilda Rix Nicholas

Angela Strk says: 15 July 2013 at 8:08 am

I love her work but disappointed by the review in the Australian by Christopher Allen that seemed to say she was superficial:

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