Smith, Bernard

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Name
Smith, Bernard Gender: M
Bernard William Smith
born on 3 October 1916 at 19:30 (= 7:30 PM )
Place Sydney, Australia, 33s52, 151e13
Timezone AEST h10e (is standard time)
Data source
From memory
Rodden Rating A
Collector: Scholfield
Astrology data s_su.18.gif s_libcol.18.gif 09°50' s_mo.18.gif s_sagcol.18.gif 25°59 Asc.s_aricol.18.gif 29°47'



Biography

Australian art historian, art critic and academic.

In 1941, he married his first wife, who died in 1989. Smith married his second wife in 1995.

Smith was educated at the University of Sydney. Between 1935 and 1944 he taught in the NSW Department of Education. After that he served as an education officer for the Art Gallery of NSW country art exhibitions programme from 1944. In 1948, he won a scholarship to study at the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, University of London. On his return to Australia in 1951, Smith returned to his position at the art gallery. In 1952, Smith was awarded a research scholarship at the newly established Australian National University, where he completed a PhD.

He was a lecturer and then a senior lecturer in the University of Melbourne's Fine Arts Department (1955–1967). In 1959, he convened a group of seven emerging figurative painters known as the Antipodeans, which organised its only exhibition in August that year. Between 1963 and 1966, he worked as an art critic for The Age newspaper, Melbourne.

In 1967, the Smiths moved to Sydney, where he became the founding Professor of Contemporary Art and Director of the Power Institute of Fine Arts, University of Sydney, a position he held until his retirement in 1977. In 1977, the Smiths returned to Melbourne, and Smith became the president of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, until 1980. Later, he was a professorial fellow in the department of Art History at the University of Melbourne.

Smith was a recipient, Chevalier, of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He died on 2 September 2011.

Link to Wikipedia biography

Events

Source Notes

Sy Scholfield cites his mother as quoted in Bernard Smith's book, "The Boy Adeodatus: The Portrait of a Lucky Young Bastard" (Ringwood, Vic.: Allen Lane, 1984), p. 68: "My baby was born at 7.30 p.m. on 3 October 1916 a little boy with long black hair."

Categories

  • Vocation : Humanities+Social Sciences : Historian
  • Vocation : Writers : Critic