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Yvette Coppersmith

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Manage episode 356528931 series 1255162
Content provided by Maria Stoljar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Maria Stoljar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

For those of you interested in portraiture in Australia, Yvette Coppersmith needs no introduction.

She has painted dozens of portraits, including a collection of fascinating self-portraits, and is regularly shortlisted in the country’s most competitive portrait awards. In 2018 she was awarded the one that would place her in Australian art history – the Archibald Prize.

What has captured my attention more recently, though, are Yvette’s abstract works, particularly a body of work I saw in her exhibition ‘Presage’ at Sullivan + Strumpf in Sydney last year. They were thickly textured, swirling abstractions and how she came to create that show is as interesting as the paintings themselves.

Yvette has been painting for over 20 years and her work is held in many public and private collections. In addition to winning the Archibald Prize, she has won the Metro 5 Art Award and has been a finalist multiple times in nearly every prestigious portrait prize in Australia, including the Doug Moran, Portia Geach, and Darling Portrait prizes.

In this episode we follow her career from her early photorealistic works to her present-day experimentation with paint and genre, encompassing still lifes and interiors along the way.

To hear the conversation click ‘play’ below the above photo. See below for images of the works we talk about in the show.

Photograph of Yvette Coppersmith by Mel Savage

Links

‘Self-portrait after George Lambert’, oil and acrylic on linen, 122 x 101.5cm, 2018

Winner Archibald Prize 2018

‘Nude Self-portrait after Rah Fizelle’, oil on linen, 91.5 x 66cm, 2016

Finalist, Portia Geach Memorial Award, 2016

‘John Safran’, oil on plywood, 120cm x 90cm, 2009

Archibald Prize finalist 2009

‘John Safran’, oil on plywood, 120cm x 90cm, 2009

Archibald Prize finalist 2009

‘In the Garland, portrait of Paul Capsis’, oil on linen, 22.5 x 111.5cm, 2007

Finalist, Archibald Prize, 2008

‘Untitled Movement (Scarlet Lake)’, oil on jute, 76.5 x 61cm, 2022

Photo: Matthew Stanton

‘Untitled Movement (Triptych)’, oil on jute, 3 x 122.5cm x 91.5cm

Photo: Simon Hewson

‘Arrangement with Grey and Yellow’, oil on linen 61cm x 46cm , 2014

‘Geranium and Succulents’, oil on linen, 80cm x 59.5cm, 2015

Posthumous Portrait of Edith Morris, oil on linen, 86.5cm x 63.5cm, 2020

Photo: Matthew Stanton

Collection of Melbourne Girls Grammar School

  continue reading

161 episodes

Artwork

Yvette Coppersmith

Talking with Painters

98 subscribers

published

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Manage episode 356528931 series 1255162
Content provided by Maria Stoljar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Maria Stoljar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

For those of you interested in portraiture in Australia, Yvette Coppersmith needs no introduction.

She has painted dozens of portraits, including a collection of fascinating self-portraits, and is regularly shortlisted in the country’s most competitive portrait awards. In 2018 she was awarded the one that would place her in Australian art history – the Archibald Prize.

What has captured my attention more recently, though, are Yvette’s abstract works, particularly a body of work I saw in her exhibition ‘Presage’ at Sullivan + Strumpf in Sydney last year. They were thickly textured, swirling abstractions and how she came to create that show is as interesting as the paintings themselves.

Yvette has been painting for over 20 years and her work is held in many public and private collections. In addition to winning the Archibald Prize, she has won the Metro 5 Art Award and has been a finalist multiple times in nearly every prestigious portrait prize in Australia, including the Doug Moran, Portia Geach, and Darling Portrait prizes.

In this episode we follow her career from her early photorealistic works to her present-day experimentation with paint and genre, encompassing still lifes and interiors along the way.

To hear the conversation click ‘play’ below the above photo. See below for images of the works we talk about in the show.

Photograph of Yvette Coppersmith by Mel Savage

Links

‘Self-portrait after George Lambert’, oil and acrylic on linen, 122 x 101.5cm, 2018

Winner Archibald Prize 2018

‘Nude Self-portrait after Rah Fizelle’, oil on linen, 91.5 x 66cm, 2016

Finalist, Portia Geach Memorial Award, 2016

‘John Safran’, oil on plywood, 120cm x 90cm, 2009

Archibald Prize finalist 2009

‘John Safran’, oil on plywood, 120cm x 90cm, 2009

Archibald Prize finalist 2009

‘In the Garland, portrait of Paul Capsis’, oil on linen, 22.5 x 111.5cm, 2007

Finalist, Archibald Prize, 2008

‘Untitled Movement (Scarlet Lake)’, oil on jute, 76.5 x 61cm, 2022

Photo: Matthew Stanton

‘Untitled Movement (Triptych)’, oil on jute, 3 x 122.5cm x 91.5cm

Photo: Simon Hewson

‘Arrangement with Grey and Yellow’, oil on linen 61cm x 46cm , 2014

‘Geranium and Succulents’, oil on linen, 80cm x 59.5cm, 2015

Posthumous Portrait of Edith Morris, oil on linen, 86.5cm x 63.5cm, 2020

Photo: Matthew Stanton

Collection of Melbourne Girls Grammar School

  continue reading

161 episodes

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