Advertisement

John DeBurgh Perceval

Advertisement

John DeBurgh Perceval

Birth
Bruce Rock, Bruce Rock Shire, Western Australia, Australia
Death
15 Oct 2000 (aged 77)
Melbourne, Melbourne City, Victoria, Australia
Burial
Caulfield South, Glen Eira City, Victoria, Australia GPS-Latitude: -37.900183, Longitude: 145.020644
Plot
Lawn 'JA' 98A
Memorial ID
View Source
John de Burgh Perceval (1923-2000)
Artist, Potter & Soldier 150 Years: 150 Lives
Born aka Linwood Robert Steven South on 1 February 1923 at Bruce Rock, Western Australia, the son of Robert South a wheat farmer and Dorothy née Dolton; his parents separated when Perceval was eighteen months old and until 1934 he lived with his father ("a tireless, hard worker and impressive farmer...(but) feared for his impulsive temper and occasional violent outbursts") until his mother's marriage to William de Burgh Perceval. He then changed his name by deed poll. He won a bursary at Trinity Grammar where he gained an appreciation of drawing but was largely untrained; at the age of fifteen he suffered from a bout of poliomyelitits (polio) that left him permanently lame in his lower right leg. In December 1941 Perceval voluntarily enlisted in the army and joined the Cartographic Company where he met Arthur Boyd (q.v.) but was discharged after eight months and moved into the Boyd family home at Open Country - Murrumbeena ("the guest who came to stay"); he fell in love with Boyd's younger sister Mary whom he married in November 1944 and with others helped to establish "Arthur Merric Boyd (AMB) Pottery" (500 Neerim Road, Murrumbeena) having temporarily abandoned painting from 1950 until 1954. The last surviving member of the avant-garde group of artists known as the "Angry Penguins" that profoundly redefined the Australian art scene in the 1940s, Perceval was described as "the humanist and poet" of the group. His paintings were "energetic and tactile" in technique "characterised by an exuberant use of colour and vigorous application of paint" which often took an intimate and personal view of the subject, his most notable works being from the acclaimed "Williamstown" series painted during the 1950s and 60s notably "Tugboat in a Boat" (1956), "Buoys in the Sunshower" (1956), "Sulphur Smoke" (1959) and "The Dredge and the Polly Woodside" (1967); just prior to his death "Scudding Swans" (1959) sold for $552,500 - a record for a living Australian painter. But ultimately, as the 'junior' Penguin, Perceval's standing in Australian art is somewhat overshadowed by Boyd, Tucker (q.v.) and Nolan. By the mid-1970s he was a broken man. In financial disarray and suffering from schizophrenia and alcoholism, in 1977 he admitted himself into the psychiatric hospital Larundel where he spent the next nine years. In 1990 Perceval's contribution to the history and development of Australian art was acknowledged with being awarded the Officer of the Order of Australia. He died on 15 October 2000 survived by his four children; he once remarked - "Children are the real world. I have fought adulthood all my life".

John de Burgh Perceval AO (1 February 1923 – 15 October 2000) was a well-known Australian artist. Perceval was the last surviving member of a group known as the Angry Penguins who redefined Australian art in the 1940s. Other members included John and Sunday Reed, Joy Hester, Sidney Nolan, Arthur Boyd and Albert Tucker. He was also an Antipodean and contributed to the Antipodeans exhibition of 1959.
1965 they returned to Australia when Perceval was offered a fellowship at the University of Canberra. During the late 1960s, Perceval's increasing alcoholism put pressure on the marriage, and Mary returned to London with her youngest daughter, Alice. By the end of the decade Mary was divorced and living in Britain with all her children.
Perceval was survived by his four children; Matthew, Tessa, Celia and Alice, all of whom are practising artists today.
Awards McCaughey Prize (1958)
Wynne Prize (1960)
Officer of the Order of Australia (1991)
Wiki
John de Burgh Perceval (1923-2000)
Artist, Potter & Soldier 150 Years: 150 Lives
Born aka Linwood Robert Steven South on 1 February 1923 at Bruce Rock, Western Australia, the son of Robert South a wheat farmer and Dorothy née Dolton; his parents separated when Perceval was eighteen months old and until 1934 he lived with his father ("a tireless, hard worker and impressive farmer...(but) feared for his impulsive temper and occasional violent outbursts") until his mother's marriage to William de Burgh Perceval. He then changed his name by deed poll. He won a bursary at Trinity Grammar where he gained an appreciation of drawing but was largely untrained; at the age of fifteen he suffered from a bout of poliomyelitits (polio) that left him permanently lame in his lower right leg. In December 1941 Perceval voluntarily enlisted in the army and joined the Cartographic Company where he met Arthur Boyd (q.v.) but was discharged after eight months and moved into the Boyd family home at Open Country - Murrumbeena ("the guest who came to stay"); he fell in love with Boyd's younger sister Mary whom he married in November 1944 and with others helped to establish "Arthur Merric Boyd (AMB) Pottery" (500 Neerim Road, Murrumbeena) having temporarily abandoned painting from 1950 until 1954. The last surviving member of the avant-garde group of artists known as the "Angry Penguins" that profoundly redefined the Australian art scene in the 1940s, Perceval was described as "the humanist and poet" of the group. His paintings were "energetic and tactile" in technique "characterised by an exuberant use of colour and vigorous application of paint" which often took an intimate and personal view of the subject, his most notable works being from the acclaimed "Williamstown" series painted during the 1950s and 60s notably "Tugboat in a Boat" (1956), "Buoys in the Sunshower" (1956), "Sulphur Smoke" (1959) and "The Dredge and the Polly Woodside" (1967); just prior to his death "Scudding Swans" (1959) sold for $552,500 - a record for a living Australian painter. But ultimately, as the 'junior' Penguin, Perceval's standing in Australian art is somewhat overshadowed by Boyd, Tucker (q.v.) and Nolan. By the mid-1970s he was a broken man. In financial disarray and suffering from schizophrenia and alcoholism, in 1977 he admitted himself into the psychiatric hospital Larundel where he spent the next nine years. In 1990 Perceval's contribution to the history and development of Australian art was acknowledged with being awarded the Officer of the Order of Australia. He died on 15 October 2000 survived by his four children; he once remarked - "Children are the real world. I have fought adulthood all my life".

John de Burgh Perceval AO (1 February 1923 – 15 October 2000) was a well-known Australian artist. Perceval was the last surviving member of a group known as the Angry Penguins who redefined Australian art in the 1940s. Other members included John and Sunday Reed, Joy Hester, Sidney Nolan, Arthur Boyd and Albert Tucker. He was also an Antipodean and contributed to the Antipodeans exhibition of 1959.
1965 they returned to Australia when Perceval was offered a fellowship at the University of Canberra. During the late 1960s, Perceval's increasing alcoholism put pressure on the marriage, and Mary returned to London with her youngest daughter, Alice. By the end of the decade Mary was divorced and living in Britain with all her children.
Perceval was survived by his four children; Matthew, Tessa, Celia and Alice, all of whom are practising artists today.
Awards McCaughey Prize (1958)
Wynne Prize (1960)
Officer of the Order of Australia (1991)
Wiki

Gravesite Details

Age: 77 years 8 months 14 days, Death date listed may be the interment date



Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement