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=== Posthumous ===
=== Posthumous ===

* 1976, 1 July 1976–1 October: ''Outlines of Australian Printmaking: Prints of Australia from the last third of the 18th century until the present time''. [[Art Gallery of Ballarat|Ballarat Fine Art Gallery]]<ref name=":1" />
* 1976, 1 July 1976–1 October: ''Outlines of Australian Printmaking: Prints of Australia from the last third of the 18th century until the present time''. [[Art Gallery of Ballarat|Ballarat Fine Art Gallery]]<ref name=":1" />
* 1978, 13 April – 5 May: ''A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900 - 1950''. Deutscher Galleries<ref name=":1" />
* 1978, 13 April – 5 May: ''A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900 - 1950''. Deutscher Galleries<ref name=":1" />
Line 142: Line 141:
* 1987, 30 April–30 May: ''Masterpieces of Australian printmaking''. Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney<ref name=":1" />
* 1987, 30 April–30 May: ''Masterpieces of Australian printmaking''. Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney<ref name=":1" />
* 1988, 5–26 March: ''Australian women printmakers'', Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney<ref name=":1" />
* 1988, 5–26 March: ''Australian women printmakers'', Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney<ref name=":1" />
* 1992, 20 September – 25 October: The Art of Christian Waller. [[Castlemaine Art Museum|Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum]]<ref>Rebecca Lancashire, "A creative world, naturally,"'' The Age'' (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 19 September 1992, p. 150</ref>
* 1995, 8 March 1995: ''Women Printmakers 1910 to 1940 in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum''. [[Castlemaine Art Museum|Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum]]<ref name=":1" />
* 1995, 8 March 1995: ''Women Printmakers 1910 to 1940 in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum''. [[Castlemaine Art Museum|Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum]]<ref name=":1" />
*2017/18, 11 November—5 February: ''Daughters of the Sun: [[Christian Waller]] and [[Klytie Pate]]''. [[Castlemaine Art Museum]]


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 22:51, 27 August 2022

Christian Waller
Portrait of Christian Waller by Jack Cato, 1930s
Born
Christian Yandell

(1894-08-02)2 August 1894
Died25 May 1954(1954-05-25) (aged 59)
NationalityAustralian
EducationNational Gallery of Victoria Art School
Known forPrintmaking, Painting, Stained glass, illustration
MovementSymbolism
SpouseNapier Waller

Christian Marjory Emily Carlyle (Yandell) Waller (2 August 1894 - 25 May 1954) was an Australian painter, writer, printmaker, illustrator, book designer, woodcutter, and stained-glass artist.

Waller signed and exhibited her work under her maiden name (Yandell) until 1930, but thereafter used her married name (Waller).[1]

Early career

In 1905 Yandell studied painting at Castlemaine School of Mines. In 1909, her painting, A Petition (a Greek scene in the manner of Alma-Tadema featuring her sister Florence), hung in the Bendigo Art Gallery and was shown at the local Masonic Hall.

In 1910 Yandell moved to Melbourne where she studied at Melbourne National Gallery Schools (now: National Gallery of Victoria Art School). While there she won several student prizes and exhibited with the Victorian Artists Society (1913–22). Yandell illustrated publications, such as Melba's Gift Book of Australian Art and Literature (1915).

During the 1920s, Yandell became a leading book illustrator, winning acclaim as the first Australian artist to illustrate Alice in Wonderland (1924). "Yandell’s drawings are an eclectic mix, ranging from depictions of the iconic Mad Hatter’s Tea Party through to densely drawn processional scenes and simple sketches of Wonderland’s inhabitants. These reveal her to be strong in landscape, design, and the depiction of animals, but less so the human form, though we know from extant pencil sketches that her life drawing was sound."[2]

Artistic works

Christian Waller, with a hand-printed book, 1932

Amongst interwar Australian printmakers Waller is regarded for her strong Symbolist compositions relating to the Vienna Seccession to which she was exposed through her teacher Bernard Hall at the National Gallery School.[3] A major influence and theme across all the media in which she worked was Theosophy, which had adherents amongst a number of other Australian artists, though not a member of the Society.[3]

Although her work was mostly in linocut, with black and white linework, the complexity of her designs often exceeded that of her contemporaries in works like The Great Breath. She worked closely with Geelong based Henry Tatlock Miller and his Golden Arrow Press, to produce limited edition books, although Hendrik Kohlenberg suggests that Waller undertook most of the physical production of the book in her Fairy Hills studio[4] and only a fraction of the planned 150 book edition for The Great Breath was ever completed.[5]

Another similar production of equal rarity is The Gates of Dawn. "Her print work is characterised by a complex symbolism, combining ancient classical and literary subjects alongside occult motifs in a dynamic style owing much to the bold geometry of Art Deco and the handmade ethos of the Arts and Crafts movement."[6]

Stained Glass

Beside her graphic works, Waller was a leading stained-glass maker in Australia of the twentieth century. Travelling to London in 1929 she investigated the manufacture of stained glass at the studio of Veronica and Christopher Whall. From 1927 to 1953 she produced more than one hundred individual stained-glass panels. In this medium she was innovative, employing radical techniques unknown in Australia at the time.  Doing almost all the work herself, while at the same time assisting her husband Napier Waller with his mosaics, she competed with the commercial stained glass companies Brooks, Robinson and E. L. Yencken & Co for whom artists Jock Frater, Arnold Shore and Alan Sumner worked.

Art historian Caroline Miley notes:

"Her windows, mainly ecclesiastical commissions, are notable for the originality of their concepts, the beauty of their colouration and delicacy of painting. They combine subtle and varied symbolism with a strong personal element which gives them a drawing power beyond the usual."[3]

Personal life

In 1915 Christian Yandell married a fellow artist, the muralist Napier Waller. She went to New York in 1939 and joined a commune where she completed several murals and became a follower of the African American philosopher and mystic Father Divine highlighting her longstanding interest in mysticism and the occult. "In 1940 she returned to the home she shared with her husband at Ivanhoe, Melbourne. She immersed herself in her work and became increasingly reclusive. In 1942 she painted a large mural for Christ Church, Geelong; by 1948 she had completed more than fifty stained-glass windows."[7] These windows also show the strongly decorative modernist stylisation seen in her printmaking.

Waller took care of her niece Klytie Pate from about 1925, when Pate's father remarried and sent his daughter to live with her aunt. Both Christian and Napier Waller encouraged Pate's talents and she became a significant Australian potter, who shared the strong decorative, art deco approach of her aunt and mentor. In 2018 the Bendigo Art Gallery held a joint retrospective for both Waller and Pate[8] in an exhibition Daughters of the Sun.

Collections

Stained Glass Works

1927

  • St Jude's Anglican Church, Alphington (deconsecrated; window in storage): The Light of the World; Suffer Little Children

1928

  • University of Melbourne: Stevens window (collabooation with Stevens window in collaboration with Napier Waller (destroyed)

1929

  • Chapel Of The Holy Innocents, Anglican Children's Home, Middle Brighton: Angel faces (destroyed)

1930

  • St John's Anglican Church, Camberwell (destroyed): The Apotheosis of David; David as Shepherd, as King and as Builder
  • St Matthew's Anglican Church, East Geelong: The Presentation in the Temple; Suffer Little Children; Christ with Angels
  • Canterbury Uniting Church, Canterbury: The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes; Suffer Little Children
  • Autonomous Panel: Angus Og & Caer Ormaith

1931

  • All Saints Anglican Church, Canowindra, NSW: St Mary Magdalene
  • Shelford Presbyterian Church, Shelford: St Andrew and St Nicholas
  • Chapel Of All Saints, Geelong Grammar School, Corio: Thomas Arnold and William of Wykeham (collaboration with Napier Waller)
  • St Paul's Anglican Church, Canterbury: Christ the King of All Nations

1934

  • Queen's College Chapel, University of Melbourne, Parkville: The Song of St Francis
  • St Giles' Uniting Church, Murrumbeena: St Giles
  • St Paul's Anglican Church, Frankston: Richard de Wiche; Richard Bishop of Chichester; Saint Richard; Christ the King
  • St Ambrose's Anglican Church, Gilgandra, NSW: I am the Resurrection; I am the Good Shepherd

1935

  • St Peter's Anglican Church, Brighton Beach: St Cecelia; St Peter
  • Wilson Hall, University Of Melbourne: Leckie window (collaboration with Napier Waller)
  • St James' Old Cathedral, West Melbourne: St Hilda
  • St Matthew's Anglican Church, Prahran: Penitence; Pardon; Peace
  • St Matthew's Anglican Church, East Geelong, Victoria: St Joseph of Arimathea and Entombment of Christ

1936

  • Canterbury Uniting Church, Canterbury (formerly Canterbury Methodist Church): The Incarnation
  • Toorak Uniting Church, Toorak: If I Take the Wings of the Morning
  • Littlejohn Memorial Chapel, Scotch College, Hawthorn: St Peter's Sermon on the Morning of Pentecost
  • Chapel Of All Saints, Geelong Grammar School, Corio: The Light Shineth in Darkness
  • All Saints Anglican Church, Bendigo (deconsecrated): Isaiah; St Peter; Sundar Singh (collaboration with Napier Waller)

1937

1938

  • St Paul's Anglican Church, Linton: The Nativity and the Ascension with angels
  • St Barnabas' Anglican Church, West Wyalong: Jesus with the Doctors
  • St James' Anglican Church, Ivanhoe: St Agnes; St Cecelia; I am the Good Shepherd; I am the Light of the World; I am the Resurrection and the Life; I am the Bread of Life; I am the Vine

1939

1940

  • St Barnabas' Anglican Church, West Wyalong: The Descent of the Spirit of God
  • Autonomous Panel: East of the Sun and West of the Moon
  • The Good Shepherd Anglican Church, Mt Macedon (destroyed); Behold the Lamb of God and Behold your King; Lauding angel; Lauding angel

1942

  • St James' Old Cathedral, West Melbourne: St Peter; St James
  • St James' Anglican Church, Ivanhoe: Dorcas
  • St Stephen's Anglican Church, Darebin (Fairy Hills): Angels

1943

  • All Saints Anglican Church, Canowindra, NSW: Jesus with the Doctors

1944

  • St Mark's Anglican Church, Camberwell: St Andrew and an Airman

* Chapel Of All Saints, Geelong Grammar School, Corio: Uriel and Michel (collaboration withNapier Waller)

1946

  • St James' Anglican Church, Ivanhoe: The Child Jesus

1947-48

  • Chapel Of All Saints, Geelong Grammar School, Corio: War Memorials: Australia; SE Asia; Malaya; SW Pacific (McWhae); Singapore (Lindon); Greece, Crete (JN Learmonth); New Guinea (CC Learmonth); Beirut Syria (Wright); SW Pacific (Seller); SW Pacific (Gove); N Africa (Leach); S England (Fisk); SW Pacific (Pugh); Sicily (Lloyd); New Britain (Anderson); India (Bowes); New Guinea (Hammond)

1948

  • Christ Church Anglican Church, Geelong: Revelation (Christ Triumphant)
  • St James' Anglican Church, Ivanhoe: Faith
  • St Mark's Anglican Church, Camberwell: St Luke and Florence Nightingale; St John the Divine and David Livingstone

1950

  • St Mark's Anglican Church, Camberwell: He Ascended (collaboration with NapierWaller); The Triumphant Christ (collaboration with Napier Waller)
  • Chapel Of All Saints, Geelong Grammar School, Corio: St Michael

1952

  • St Paul's Anglican Church, Canterbury: The Acts and St Paul

1953

  • All Saints Anglican Church, Newtown, Geelong: The Nativity (collaboration with Napier Waller)

Exhibitions

  • 1923, 1 August: Exhibition of Woodcuts. Tyrrell's Galleries, NSW[11]
  • 1931, 3–24 December: 7th Xmas Exhibition of Etchings and Woodcuts by Leading English and Australian Artists[11]
  • 1932, 5–16 April: Exhibition of Linocuts, Everyman's Lending Library[11]
  • 1932, 6–24 December: Eighth Xmas Exhibition of Etchings and Woodcuts by Master Etchers, Sedon Galleries, Melbourne[11]
  • 1934, 16–26 November: Heidelberg Art Exhibition. Ivanhoe Hall[11]

Posthumous

  • 1976, 1 July 1976–1 October: Outlines of Australian Printmaking: Prints of Australia from the last third of the 18th century until the present time. Ballarat Fine Art Gallery[11]
  • 1978, 13 April – 5 May: A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900 - 1950. Deutscher Galleries[11]
  • 1983, 8 June–24 June: Images of Women Prints and Drawings of the Twentieth Century. University Of Melbourne Art Gallery[11]
  • 1987, 30 April–30 May: Masterpieces of Australian printmaking. Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney[11]
  • 1988, 5–26 March: Australian women printmakers, Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney[11]
  • 1992, 20 September – 25 October: The Art of Christian Waller. Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum[12]
  • 1995, 8 March 1995: Women Printmakers 1910 to 1940 in the Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum. Castlemaine Art Gallery And Historical Museum[11]
  • 2017/18, 11 November—5 February: Daughters of the Sun: Christian Waller and Klytie Pate. Castlemaine Art Museum

References

  1. ^ "Waller, Christian Marjory Emily Carlyle (1894-1954)". Trove. Retrieved 8 March 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Organ, Michael (2015). "Pre-Raphaelite Wonderland: Christian Yandell's Alice". UOW.EDU. Archived from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Miley, Caroline (2022). Christian Waller Stained Glass: Towards The Light (1st ed.). Australia, North Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing. ISBN 9781922669476. OCLC 1342128719.
  4. ^ "WALLER HOUSE AND COLLECTION". Victorian Heritage Register. 19 December 2019. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  5. ^ "The great breath; a book of seven designs, (1932) by Christian Waller". Art Gallery of NSW. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  6. ^ "Daughters Of The Sun: Christian Waller & Klytie Pate". Bendigo Art Gallery. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  7. ^ Thomas, David, "Waller, Christian Marjory (1894–1954)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 8 March 2020
  8. ^ Pedler, Chris (9 November 2018). "Castlemaine artist Christian Waller featured in new exhibition". Bendigo Advertiser. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  9. ^ Waller, Napier. "Christian Waller with Baldur, Undine and Siren at Fairy Hills". Item held by National Gallery of Australia. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  10. ^ "Christian Waller (b.1895, d.1954)". Castlemaine Art Museum Collection Online. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Waller, Christian. (1894–1954) · Related exhibitions · Australian Prints + Printmaking". www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  12. ^ Rebecca Lancashire, "A creative world, naturally," The Age (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 19 September 1992, p. 150