Adelaide Art Circle

The Adelaide Art Circle was an association of artists in Adelaide, South Australia, founded by H. P. Gill.

The club was founded early in 1890, with Gill as president and G. A. Reynolds as hon. secretary. According to the rules as laid down by Gill, membership was restricted to professional artists, by invitation, and limited to 12 members.[1] They would meet monthly in one or other of the members' homes, and each had to submit a new work to be critiqued by the other members. They would hold annual exhibitions.

The first members were Gill and Reynolds, watercolorist W. P. H. Haines, A(lfred) Scott Broad, Edward Davies, M. F. Cavanagh, H. E. Powell, W. K. Gold, E. J. Woods and W. J. Maxwell. W. J. Wadham and his brother Alf Sinclair were elected to the circle in 1892.[2] Two exhibitions were held, and generally well received, but clearly dominated by Gill's prodigious output. The club folded in 1892 without fanfare, but seemed to coincide with the rebirth of the moribund South Australian Society of Arts and the election to its board of Gill president), Gold (secretary), Powell (treasurer), and a new committee consisted of Broad, Cavanagh, James Keane, Reynolds, and Wadham,[3] Keane alone in not being a member of the Circle.

In December that year the Wadham brothers, Reynolds and Broad broke away from the Society of Arts to help found the Adelaide Easel Club. The Easel Club merged with the Society of Arts in 1901, largely through the diplomatic efforts of the society's president, Chief Justice Way and Prof. W. H. Bragg.[4]

References

  1. "Adelaide Art Circle". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. XXXIV, no. 10270. South Australia. 17 September 1891. p. 6. Retrieved 21 October 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "Annual meeting of the Adelaide Art Circle". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. XXXIV, no. 10441. South Australia. 5 April 1892. p. 4. Retrieved 21 October 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "Meeting of the Society of Arts". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. XXXIV, no. 10496. South Australia. 8 June 1892. p. 5. Retrieved 23 October 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "Society of Arts". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. XLIV, no. 13, 427. South Australia. 30 October 1901. p. 7. Retrieved 21 October 2020 via National Library of Australia.
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