Judy Cassab: An Australian story
By (Author) Brenda Niall
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st April 2007
Australia
General
Non Fiction
The Holocaust
Second World War
European history
700.92
Winner of Fellowship of Australian Writers' (FAW) Melbourne University Publishing Award 2005 (Australia)
Paperback
344
Width 152mm, Height 230mm
534g
Judy Cassab has always been shadowed by her past. Born in Vienna in 1920 to Hungarian Jewish parents, she lived through the horrors of the Second World War. Her husband taken to a labour camp and her family killed in Auschwitz, she managed to survive in hiding.
Cassab migrated to Australia at a time when few women artists were given serious attention. Today, twice the winner of the Archibald Prize, Cassab is one of Australia's foremost painters, celebrated for her haunting desert landscapes as well as her portraits. But even in the midst of her triumphs, the effects of the Holocaust couldn't be left behind.
Judy Cassab's has been a life of struggle: to survive war, persecution and exile; to make a place for herself in Sydney as a migrant and an artist; and to hold together a loving but difficult marriage. Yet the Judy Cassab we see in this intimate biographical portrait is strong and vibrant, a woman of overriding passion, resilience and amazing determination.
Melbourne writer Brenda Niall has had a distinguished academic career at Monash University where she was Reader (Associate Professor) in the English Department. She is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She now writes fulltime and has won a host of literary prizes, including the National Book Council (Banjo) award and the Fellowship of Australian Writers Biography award for Martin Boyd: a Life; the Victorian Premier's award and the Australian Unity award for her biography of pioneer painter Georgiana McCrae; and the Queensland and Victorian Premiers' awards for The Boyds. In 2004 she was awarded the Order of Australia (AO).