Gael Newton
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Gael Lauraine Newton AM (1949– ) is an Australian art historian and curator specialising in surveys and studies of photography across the Asia-Pacific region. Newton was formerly curator of photography at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, and the Senior Curator of Australian and International Photography at the
National Gallery of Australia The National Gallery of Australia (NGA), formerly the Australian National Gallery, is the national art museum of Australia as well as one of the largest art museums in Australia, holding more than 166,000 works of art. Located in Canberra in th ...
(NGA) in
Canberra Canberra ( ; ) is the capital city of Australia. Founded following the Federation of Australia, federation of the colonies of Australia as the seat of government for the new nation, it is Australia's list of cities in Australia, largest in ...
.


Education

After her secondary education at Manly Girls High, Newton took studies as one of the first intake into the Power Department of Fine Art at the
University of Sydney The University of Sydney (USYD) is a public university, public research university in Sydney, Australia. Founded in 1850, it is the oldest university in both Australia and Oceania. One of Australia's six sandstone universities, it was one of the ...
in 1969-1972 then, pursuing an interest in art practice, enrolled at the Elam Art School in Auckland where photography was a compulsory subject in first year, and was awarded a Bachelor of Fine Art majoring in photography in 1974. She started a Masters degree in art history which was interrupted by a move back to Australia in 1974 and a series of temporary positions at the Art Gallery of New South Wales which introduced the desirability of a career in art museum curatorship, in which she was further encouraged by historian Joan Kerr. After her marriage Newton lived in 1976 in
Glebe A glebe (, also known as church furlong, rectory manor or parson's close(s)) is an area of land within an ecclesiastical parish used to support a parish priest. The land may be owned by the church, or its profits may be reserved to the church. ...
and later, Cremorne.


Career


Art Gallery of New South Wales

Newton, mentored by Daniel Thomas, was the foundation curator of photography at the
Art Gallery of New South Wales The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW), founded as the New South Wales Academy of Art in 1872 and known as the National Art Gallery of New South Wales between 1883 and 1958, is located in The Domain, Sydney, Australia. It is the most import ...
from 1974-1985, and processed the Cazneaux sisters' donation of their father's prints as the foundation of the collection. Her 1979 public talk ' John Cato: The Photographic Essay' comparing him to Americans
White White is the lightest color and is achromatic (having no chroma). It is the color of objects such as snow, chalk, and milk, and is the opposite of black. White objects fully (or almost fully) reflect and scatter all the visible wa ...
and Steiglitz, and a 'promenade lecture' on 'Australian Pictorial Photography', are examples of her intention to set Australian photography in an international context. Critic Nancy Borlase acknowledged that the gallery's photography collection was 'non-existent' prior to Newton efforts, while Tony Perry in Melbourne remarked that 'all praise is due to Newton for her scholarly research and discriminating selection'.


Curation and publication

In 1980, Newton had three books released; ''Max Dupain photographs 1928-1980''; ''Philip Geeves presents Cazneaux's Sydney 1904-1934''; and ''Silver and Grey: Fifty Years of Australian Photography,'' a critical survey of Australian Pictorialist photography which in 1981 was awarded 'Best Art Book' by The Australian Book Publishers Association. Among her several curated shows was her exhibition and accompanying publication that assembled the works of
Max Dupain Maxwell Spencer Dupain AC OBE (22 April 191127 July 1992) was an Australian modernist photographer. Early life Dupain received his first camera as a gift in 1924, spurring his interest in photography. He later joined the Photographic Society ...
in 1980, and which brought him to attention as one of Australia's most significant photographers. In the accompanying book, in which she expanded on knowledge of the work of John Kauffmann and
Harold Cazneaux Harold Pierce Cazneaux (30 March 1878 – 19 June 1953), commonly referred to as H. P. Cazneaux, was an Australian photographer; a pioneer whose style had an indelible impact on Australian photographic history. In 1916, he was a founding membe ...
, Newton notes in discussing Dupain's early Pictorialist work that ‘Theoretically, the movement was an extension of the eighteenth-century notions of the Picturesque and nineteenth century Romantic ideas.' Later, in relation to his modernist and documentary work, she praised Dupain's pre-eminence in 'photographing powerful, pure forms that make direct statements about the real world. He hammers chaos and complex material down to a lucid, simple image. The tension level between the forms and angles of movement in his photographs is always perfectly held.' Dupain however, in reviewing Newton's more radical and contemporary ''Re-constructed Vision'' of 56 works by young, experimental Australian photographers in 1981, did not reciprocate her support and promotion of him: 'Now we are back with photography mixed up with paint brushes, screen printing, scissors and paste. Once again, we are corrupting the pure and beautiful image made by straight camera technique. The full impact of this collection is disturbing. It makes you feel you are in a kind of ward for photo-psychos.' He did acknowledge however that some 'assert dthemselves on the conscious ic: works by Warren Breninger, Mike Parr (via John Delacour), Micky Allan, and Fiona Hall. Arthur McIntyre, reviewing the show in ''The Age'' was more in sympathy with Newton's 'refreshingly innovative show' of an 'intelligent selection of artists working in a variety of fields, linked by their use of photography' as a departure from conventional monochrome or colour prints. Newton displayed a large selection from the growing photography collection at the AGNSW later in 1981, to which Dupain, on whom Newton spoke at the
Australian Centre for Photography The Australian Centre for Photography (ACP) was a not-for-profit photography gallery in Darlinghurst, Sydney, Australia that was established in 1973 and which also provided part-time courses and community programs. One of the longest running c ...
, in his review responded ambivalently, but included the announcement that the NSW Government was spending $400,000 on a specialist photography gallery at AGNSW.


Public profile

In augmenting her activities at the Gallery, Newton reviewed photography books on radio and delivered lectures on Australian photography, traveling to the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne to give a public presentation.


National Gallery of Australia


Bicentennial Photography Project

From August 1985 Newton joined the
National Gallery of Australia The National Gallery of Australia (NGA), formerly the Australian National Gallery, is the national art museum of Australia as well as one of the largest art museums in Australia, holding more than 166,000 works of art. Located in Canberra in th ...
under director James Mollison as visiting curator for the 1985–1988 Bicentennial Photography Project. Announcing her appointment in ''
The Sydney Morning Herald ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (''SMH'') is a daily Tabloid (newspaper format), tabloid newspaper published in Sydney, Australia, and owned by Nine Entertainment. Founded in 1831 as the ''Sydney Herald'', the ''Herald'' is the oldest continuous ...
'', Dupain wrote that Newton's concern was with 'photography which is not applied photography as realised by the multifarious departments it serves, from medicine to advertising. Her deepest belief is that the mystical experience sensed in the presence of great photography can be as profound as the same experience in the presence of great art.' In this role Newton was a contributor to the catalogue, alongside leading Australian scholars, of the Bicentennial art exhibition ''Creating Australia: 200 Years of Art'' ''1788–1988'', presented by the Australian Bicentennial Authority and directed by Daniel Thomas, then Head of Australian Art at the South Australian Art Gallery who, as Millner notes, promoted "its ‘embrace’ of Aboriginal art not as ethnographic curio but as art proper." For the Bicentenary Newton researched and mounted the 700-work exhibition ''Shades of Light: Photography and Australia 1839-1988,'' which was welcomed by reviewer Marie Geissler for its attention to images of women, and by Sylvia Kleinert who noted Newton's demonstration of photographic practice permeating "scientific, industrial and technical spheres." Her seminar on the exhibition was enthusiastically attended by students. The publication under that title remains the standard reference work on the history of Australian photography. Of the widely reviewed book, David Doolan commented:
Helen Ennis Helen Ennis FAHA is an Australian photography curator, historian, critic and art writer. She undertakes curatorial work, academic research, and biography. Trained as an assistant curator at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra in 1981, she ...
and Chris Long uccessive curators of photography at the National Galleryhave contributed the excellent final chapters on Contemporary Photographic Practices and Natural Colour Photography 1895-1960 respectively, but ''Shades of Light'' is Gael Newton's book. It is the mature fruit of many years' work. Throughout the book, Newton and her contributors tackle the broad and seemingly eternal questions of nationalism and provincialism, houghNewton points out that from the earliest years time-lags were brief as far as technical innovations were concerned. This was not always the case for artistic innovations. Another theme which runs through most of the book is the treatment of Aboriginal people and culture. We also see how a variety of intellectual forces and fashions, from Marxism and feminism to fashion, consumerism and counter-culture, have manifested themselves in Australian photography.


Curatorship

On joining the National Gallery as a visiting curator Newton worked alongside the well established photography department curators
Helen Ennis Helen Ennis FAHA is an Australian photography curator, historian, critic and art writer. She undertakes curatorial work, academic research, and biography. Trained as an assistant curator at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra in 1981, she ...
and Kate Davidson. From about 1988-1990 she was employed as a lecturer in the Education department before taking up the position of Curator of Australian Photography on the departure of Helen Ennis, and later adding international photography on the resignation of Kate Davidson, to become Senior Curator Photography, with assistant curator Anne O’Hehir, until retirement in 2014. Other exhibitions Newton she curated at the National Gallery included ''Photographs by
Carol Jerrems Carol Joyce Jerrems (14 March 1949 – 21 February 1980) was an Australian photographer/filmmaker whose work emerged just as her medium was beginning to regain the acceptance as an art form that it had in the Pictorial era, and in which she ne ...
and Wes Stacey,'' March-May 1991, after Newton, having spent several years in the Education Office of the Gallery, had been appointed Curator of Australian, and later of International photography. In that role she set to the task of expanding the gallery's holdings in that medium. Recognising the 1980s emergence of
First Nations First nations are indigenous settlers or bands. First Nations, first nations, or first peoples may also refer to: Indigenous groups *List of Indigenous peoples *First Nations in Canada, Indigenous peoples of Canada who are neither Inuit nor Mé ...
photographers Newton employed
Kodak The Eastman Kodak Company, referred to simply as Kodak (), is an American public company that produces various products related to its historic basis in film photography. The company is headquartered in Rochester, New York, and is incorporated i ...
Australia funds to bring their work into the permanent collection.


Speaker

During her time at the NGA Newton, an engaging and knowledgeable speaker, delivered public lectures on subjects as diverse as ' Richard Long's Stones in Morocco', Italian artist Giovanni Anselmo, '
Ansel Adams Ansel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 – April 22, 1984) was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his Monochrome photography, black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association ...
and the American Landscape', a series on 'The Development of Australian Photography', and photography as art, including as Education Lecturer following the end of her Bicentennial contract in 1988, with presentations of 'The Virtues of Marriage: Tiepolo's Marriage Allegory', 'Ritual and Production–The making of Aboriginal bark paintings', 'The History of Photography', 'Equivalence: Works by
Alfred Stieglitz Alfred Stieglitz (; January 1, 1864 – July 13, 1946) was an American photographer and modern art promoter who was instrumental over his 50-year career in making photography an accepted art form. In addition to his photography, Stieglitz was k ...
', 'A Global Picture: The development of photography in the nineteenth century' 'The Bush Seen: Views of Rural Life–Prints from the 1880s', on printmaker Jessie Traill, and
Bill Henson Bill Henson (born 7 October 1955) is an Australian contemporary art photographer. Art Henson has exhibited nationally and internationally in galleries such as the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Venice Biennale, the National ...
, and floor talks and promenades through Gallery exhibitions. In 1990 for the NGA's blockbuster ''Civilisation: Ancient Treasures from the British Museum,'' she presented 'The Standard of Ur', 'Venus Transformed: The changing image ol woman in the ancient world,' and 'From the Flood Tablet to Kandinsky: Images of the Deluge', for the exhibition '' Tracey Moffatt: Something More,'' provided an introductory lecture, and spoke in November that year on 'Colour Music:
Roy de Maistre Roy De Maistre CBE (27 March 18941 March 1968) was an Australian artist of international fame. He is renowned in Australian art for his early experimentation with "colour-music", and is recognised as the first Australian artist to use pure abs ...
's abstractions and the colour theories of M.E. Chevreul' and in December on 'Love is Blue: Nijinsky's Le Dieu Bleu costume, 1912'. These were followed in 1991 by lectures on Sydney Modernist Eleanor Lange,


Published research

Newton's published work includes monographs on Australian photographers:
Harold Cazneaux Harold Pierce Cazneaux (30 March 1878 – 19 June 1953), commonly referred to as H. P. Cazneaux, was an Australian photographer; a pioneer whose style had an indelible impact on Australian photographic history. In 1916, he was a founding membe ...
,
Max Dupain Maxwell Spencer Dupain AC OBE (22 April 191127 July 1992) was an Australian modernist photographer. Early life Dupain received his first camera as a gift in 1924, spurring his interest in photography. He later joined the Photographic Society ...
, John Kauffmann and Tracey Moffatt as well as on a number of expatriate Australian and New Zealand photographers including Asia-based photojournalist Brian Brake, on ''Life'' magazine staff photographer
George Silk George Silk (17 November 1916 – 23 October 2004) was a New Zealand-born Australian photojournalist. He served as a photojournalist for Life magazine, ''Life'' for 30 years. Early life Silk was born in the New Zealand town of Levin, New Zea ...
, and on New York pioneer colour photographer, Anton Bruehl.


Collection building

From 2004 at the instigation of the new National Gallery of Australia Director Ron Radford, Newton established a collection surveying Asia-Pacific photography, incorporating works from several major private collections, with one contributing 4,000 Indonesian photographs of the colonial period. Two major exhibitions were mounted from the new collection; the 2008 ''Picture Paradise: Asia-Pacific photography 1840s-1940s''. and ''Garden of East: photography in Indonesia 1850s–1940s'' in 2014, both of which resulted in book publications. Palmer notes that in '1988, when curator Gael Newton published the first comprehensive history of Australian photography, ''Shades of Light'', on the occasion of the Bicentennial commemorating British settlement, photography by Asian Australians barely registered... ut...two decades after ''Shades of Light,'' Gael Newton’s important exhibition ''Picture Paradise: Asia-Pacific Photography 1840s–1940s'' (2008) presented a new understanding of Australian historical photography in a regional context.' In 2007 Newton contributed entries on 'Animal and Zoological Photography'; on photographers Richard Daintree, James Deane, Henry Beaufoy Merlin, and Colonel Archibald Henry Plantagenent Stuart-Wortley; and two South East Asia national surveys 'South-East Asia: Malaya, Singapore, and Philippines', and 'South-East Asia: Thailand, Burma, and Indochina (Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos),' to John Hannavy's ''Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography,'' and served on its board of advisors.


Consultant researcher

Newton left the National Gallery in September 2014 and using her expertise in museum research, education and art conservation practice, established an independent consultancy as a researcher and curator in photography, arts and the humanities, and as an accredited valuer. She provides research services and curatorial policy advice on Australian and Southeast Asian photography to collectors, dealers and national museums. Living since 2024 in Melbourne, Newton keeps extensive contacts in the field and provides formal and informal expert advice to members of her worldwide network. Newton continues to research overlooked Asia-Pacific salon, commercial, modernist, and magazine photographers of the 1900s-1960s, in the course of which she has investigated John Thomson's photo-documentation in Southeast Asia, and the regional history of colour photography.


Recognition

On Monday 11 June 2018 Gael Newton was awarded Member of the Order of Australia (AM). The citation read: “For significant service to the visual arts as photography curator, and as an author and researcher, particularly of Southeast Asian photography.”


Selected exhibitions curated

* 1979, June and August: ''Australian Pictorial Photography''. Art Gallery of New South Wales, and
Victorian College of the Arts The Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) is the arts school at the University of Melbourne in Australia. It is part of the university's Faculty of Fine Arts and Music (FFAM). It is located near the Melbourne city centre on the Southbank campus ...
* 1981, 25 July–23 August: ''Re-constructed vision: contemporary work with photography.'' Art Gallery of New South Wales * 1981: ''3 years on: a selection of acquisitions, 1978-1981''. Art Gallery of New South Wales * 1982, 17 July–29 August: ''Axel Poignant: photographs 1922-1980'', Art Gallery of New South Wales; The
Art Gallery of Western Australia The Art Gallery of Western Australia (AGWA) is a public art gallery that is part of the Perth Cultural Centre, in Perth. It is located near the Western Australian Museum and State Library of Western Australia and is supported and managed by the ...
, 1982; The
National Library of Australia The National Library of Australia (NLA), formerly the Commonwealth National Library and Commonwealth Parliament Library, is the largest reference library in Australia, responsible under the terms of the ''National Library Act 1960'' for "mainta ...
, Canberra 1982–1983, National Gallery of Victoria October/November 1983 * 1984: ''Project No. 46: Grant Mudford'' (co-curated with Bill Wright) Art Gallery of New South Wales * 1985, October–November: ''Scenes from Life, an exhibition of photographs by Robert McFarlane'', curated by Gael Newton. Print Room,
Woolloomooloo Woolloomooloo ( ) is a harbourside, inner-city eastern suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 1.5 kilometres east of the central business district, in the local government area of the City of Sydney. It is in a low-lying, former dockla ...
* 1991, 23 February–12 May: ''Counterpoints:'' ''Photographs by Carol Jerrems and Wes Stacey'', National Gallery of Australia * 1994 11 September-30 1993 - January 1994: Kodak Acquisition Fund Tenth Anniversary Show, National Gallery of Australia * 1996-1997, 22 June-11 August: ''Soft but true, John Kauffmann Art Photographer'', National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Bendigo Art Gallery 11 Sep–3 Nov 1996;
Art Gallery of New South Wales The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW), founded as the New South Wales Academy of Art in 1872 and known as the National Art Gallery of New South Wales between 1883 and 1958, is located in The Domain, Sydney, Australia. It is the most import ...
, 4 Dec 1996–27 Jan 1997; Art Gallery of South Australia, 14 March–27 April 1997; Museum of Modern Art at Heide, 3 June–13 July 1997; Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, 18 July–31 Aug 1997; Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery, 19 September- 2 November 1997 * 2000, 12 August–12 November: ''Going to extremes: George Silk, photojournalist.'' National Gallery of Australia * 2002, 7 September–1 December: ''Colour concept: international colour photography''. National Gallery of Australia * 2003, 25 January–21 April: ''The spread of time: the photography of David Moore''. National Gallery of Australia * 2003: ''The good, the great & the gifted: camera portraits by Yousuf Karsh of Ottawa and Athol Shmith of Melbourne.'' National Gallery of Australia Travelling Exhibitions


Publications

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *


References


External links


National Gallery of Australia

Art Gallery of New South Wales
{{DEFAULTSORT:Newton, Gael Australian curators Photography curators Living people Historians of photography Year of birth missing (living people) Australian women curators Members of the Order of Australia Australian art historians Elam Art School alumni Australian women art historians University of Sydney alumni 20th-century Australian historians 20th-century Australian women writers