Tate Adams: In Black and White
By (Author) Frances Thomson
Hardie Grant Media
Hardie Grant Media
14th February 2024
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Prints and printmaking
Paintings and painting
769.92
Hardback
288
Width 180mm, Height 245mm
1190g
This richly detailed biography, with almost 200 illustrations and extensive biographical and bibliographical data, records the life of an artist Tate Adams, whose influence on Australias post-war art scene was significant in numerous ways. Adams attempted to raise the status of print-making to that of painting, causing an indisputable revolution in the field and it happened in Melbourne!
Divided into five chapters, each documents a different aspect of the artists life. The first traces his Irish background, his involvement with Irelands post-war literary revival, the influence of his time spent outside Australia, and his introduction to the concept of special limited-edition artist-illustrated books.
Subsequent chapters explore the twenty odd years Tate was in charge of the print room in the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technologys art school where a stunning new generation of print-makers would emerge and established masters of the art, like Fred Williams, were invited to make prints. Alongside this activity, Tate Adams opened his Crossley Gallery in central Melbourne to enthusiastic reviews for exhibitions of prints by leading artists from Australia, the UK, Europe, the USA and Japan.
After retirement from RMIT Tate Adams was able to establish the Lyre Bird Press and indulge his long-term ambition to produce limited edition artists books. Leaving Melbourne, he took his press to Townsville where he spent the latter years of his life as a prolific studio artist.
This book describes how an artist, working with purpose and in collaboration with others, can enrich a countrys visual arts culture and bring advantages to many with similar aspirations.
Frances Thomson is a visual arts curator and writer. She completed her PhD on Tate Adams and the Australian Printmaking Revival of the 1960s in 2018. Previously, Frances directed the Artists Regional Exchange, a precursor of the Asia Pacific Triennial. She has been Director of the Kalgoorlie Museum in Western Australia and Townsvilles Perc Tucker Regional Gallery in Queensland where her legacy is Strand Ephemera and the Percivals. Her most enduring creative collaborations have included those with artist and artists book publisher, Tate Adams, and artist, muse and daughter, Jac Dyson. Frances lives in Townsville between her homes on the mainland and Magnetic Island.