Gert Sellheim

Gert Sellheim (1901–1970) was a German-Australian artist. He won the Sulman Prize for his work in 1939 for his Mural Decoration on wall of Victorian Government Tourist Bureau, Hotel Australia Building, 272 Collins Street, Melbourne.[1]

Sellheim was born in Estonia to German parents and studied architecture at universities in Germany before migrating to Western Australia in 1926. He established an architecture and design practice in Melbourne in 1930, and moved to Sydney in 1947. A significant selection of his work was exhibited in the exhibition Aboriginal Art and its Application organised by the Australian Museum, Sydney in 1941 and his design for an 'Aboriginal Art' stamp was released in Australia in 1948.[2]

Sellheim produced posters[3] for the Australian National Travel Association and his most renowned design is Qantas airlines' distinctive flying kangaroo logo, created in 1947.[4][5]

In 2019 Gert Sellheim was inducted to the Australian Graphic Design Association Hall of Fame.[6]

His grandson is the Australian novelist, poet and philosopher Dr. Berndt Sellheim.[7] He also has four other grandchildren Aneliese Sellheim, Richard Hunt, Andrew Hunt and Catherine Hunt.

References

  1. "Winner: Sir John Sulman Prize 1939". Art Gallery of NSW. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  2. Spearritt, Peter. Sellheim, Gert Hugo Emmanuel (1901-1970). Retrieved 3 March 2018. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  3. Spearritt, Peter (1991) 'Sites and Sights: Australian Travel Posters 1909-1990' in Trading Places: Australian Travel Posters 1909-1990, Monash University Gallery and National Centre for Australian Studies: Victoria
  4. Lovegrove, Keith (2000). Airline: Identity, Design and Culture, p. 126. Laurence King Publishing.
  5. Qantas Website
  6. "Gert sellheim (1901-1970)". agda.com.au. 4 November 2019. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  7. "Tara Moss". The Art of Healing. Retrieved 3 March 2018.


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