ROBERT DICKERSON "Female Study" Original Charcoal, Signed, 75cm x 53cm, Framed

Regular price $12,750.00


ROBERT DICKERSON (Australia, 1924 - 2015)
Original Charcoal on Artist Card / Paper

Title & Date: Female Study, 1988
Signed: Lower Right
Image Size: 75cm x 53cm
Frame: 103cm x 83cm (Newly Framed - Black Laminated)
Art Condition: Excellent

Provenance: Philip Bacon Galleries, QLD.  Dickerson Gallery.

You can also come view this work and many others in our Surry Hills Gallery in Sydney. Please message me to arrange a time to view in person.

Original works are also accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity from Martinez Art Dealer.

Serafin Martinez
Principal, Martinez Art Dealer
Surry Hills, Sydney, Australia
ABN 36 561 407 649

BIOGRAPHY

Robert Dickerson was born in 1924 and grew up in Sydney during the 1930s Depression era. By the time he was 14 he was working in a factory while he trained as a boxer. He toured for four years with the Jimmy Sharman Boxing Troupe. "Boxing was purely about money. I was earning 16 shillings (A$1.60) working a 44-hour week and could make two to five pounds (A$4 to A$10) if I won a fight. Minutes in the ring seemed like years, but you cope with what you have to and we needed the money – badly."

Dickerson took up drawing at the age of five, mainly aeroplanes and warships. Later the people in streetscapes became his subject matter. He joined the RAAF as a guard and continued to sketch in his spare time. Inspired by Somerset Maugham's novel The Moon and Sixpence he spent the time painting island children using tent canvas and camouflage paint.

Back in Australia he resumed a life of poverty. By the age of 30, he was married with three small children. He shovelled coal to provide for the family, painting at weekends. Later the family lived in a caravan. He continued to find time to paint and, by the end of the 1950s, his work was being noticed.

He turned professional at 35 when he won 100 pounds ($200) in the 1957 Australian Women's Weekly fridge decorating competition. A small fortune then, the prize allowed him to buy more art materials and extend his techniques. Until then he had used whatever materials were available. He enjoyed art so much that he decided to make a living out of it. Some people liked his art however others didn't. He first met art when he was three at a horse show.

×

Price Request

I agree to my email being stored and used to receive the newsletter.