Oil On Canvas, Real Flavor of Old Masters

All Clara Southern 's Paintings
The Painting Names Are Sorted From A to Z


ID Image  Painting (From A to Z)       Details 
32764  
An old bee farm, Clara Southern
 
 An old bee farm   mk80 c.1900 Oil on canvas 69.1x112.4cm
42156  
Landscape with cottage, Clara Southern
 
 Landscape with cottage   mk167 c.1900 Oil
79399  
Landscape with Cottage, Clara Southern
 
 Landscape with Cottage   Landscape with Cottage, painting, oil on canvas, 34.4 x 21.7 cm, by Clara Southern Date circa 1900 cjr
82344  
Landscape with Cottage, Clara Southern
 
 Landscape with Cottage   oil on canvas, 34.4 x 21.7 cm, by Clara Southern Date circa 1900 cyf
79398  
The Back of the Barn, Clara Southern
 
 The Back of the Barn   The Back of the Barn, painting, oil on canvas, 46.5 x 30.5 cm, by Clara Southern cjr
82343  
The Back of the Barn, Clara Southern
 
 The Back of the Barn   oil on canvas, 46.5 x 30.5 cm, by Clara Southern cyf
79302  
The Road to Warrandyte, Clara Southern
 
 The Road to Warrandyte   The Road to Warrandyte, painting, oil on canvas on board, 49.5 x 96.0 cm, by Clara Southern Date circa 1905-1910 cjr
82320  
The Road to Warrandyte, Clara Southern
 
 The Road to Warrandyte   painting, oil on canvas on board, 49.5 x 96.0 cm, by Clara Southern Date circa 1905-1910 cyf
75554  
The Yarra at Warrandyte, Clara Southern
 
 The Yarra at Warrandyte   The Yarra at Warrandyte (oil on canvas on board, 64.5 x 34.0 cm) by Clara Southern (1861-1940). cjr
77403  
Yarra at Warrandyte, Clara Southern
 
 Yarra at Warrandyte   oil on canvas on board, 64.5 x 34.0 cm) by Clara Southern cyf

Clara Southern
Australian artist, 1860-1940 Australian painter. One of the first generation of progressive, professionally educated Australian women artists, she began her training as a pupil of Mme Mouchette, painter, schoolmistress and founder of the Alliance Fran?aise in Melbourne; and later took lessons from Walter Withers. As a student at the National Gallery of Victoria (1883-7) she was nicknamed 'Panther' for her lithe beauty. From mid-1888 she shared a teaching studio with Jane Sutherland in the new purpose-built Grosvenor Chambers, where Tom Roberts was a neighbour. She had 'caught the "Impressionist" fever', reported Table Talk (2 Aug 1889), and showed 'a great variety of charming little sketches, which however are not intended for exhibition'. She showed with the Victorian Artists' Society (1889-1917): mainly subjects around Kyneton and Melbourne's outer suburbs, painted in the fresh, quasi-Impressionist style characteristic of the Heidelberg school.



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