Artist Profile

ROBERT MALHERBE

ROBERT MALHERBE LED THE WAY UP THREE FLIGHTS of quite steep stairs to his studio, in an unpretentious early 20thcentury building in Darlinghurst, unchanged save a couple of smart stainless steel doors. I’ve been up a lot of stairs to a lot of studios; there’s always the anticipation, often a sense of anxiety from the artist, when as dealer or writer you are the conduit between the maker and the world.

I usually walk around, but my Jack Russell had come with me and I wanted him to settle, so I first sat with an immediate view of some small pictures, mainly nudes and portraits. I hadn’t seen Robert’s work, and I wasn’t prepared for the scale. My immediate impression was of the impasto, Lucien Freud and Frank Auerbach came into my mind, but without the sense of pose. These paintings were quiet and intimate, small in scale, the largest no

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Artist Profile

Artist Profile4 min read
Unpredictable In Its Predictable Unpredictability
On first impression, the ARNDT Collection is a Lewis Carroll mischmasch of international twentieth century big name European trophy artists sprinkled with known Australian artists. There are some edgy stunners presented and challenging gambles on yet
Artist Profile4 min read
Fairy Tales
Fairy Tales, curated by Amanda Slack-Smith at the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), is a remarkable exhibition, featuring over a hundred works assembled from genres including film, set design, original costumes, animation, and contemporary art. The exhib
Artist Profile5 min read
Mike Parr Blind Obedience
The inscription could not have come as a surprise: Parr has long worked with language in a way that is pointed and political. An editioned print from the 1990s, titled Blind Obedience, was made by opening the thesaurus and looking up the word “Synony

Related