Robert Juniper | |
Birth Name: | Robert Litchfield Juniper |
Birth Date: | 7 January 1929 |
Birth Place: | Merredin, Western Australia, Australia |
Death Place: | Darlington, Western Australia, Australia |
Nationality: | Australian |
Spouse: | Robin-Ann (née Brennan; divorced) Amanda (née Silburn; divorced) Patricia "Trisha" (née Lowe; his death) |
Known For: | Painting, printmaking and sculpting |
Awards: | See awards |
Robert Litchfield Juniper, AM (7 January 192920 December 2012)[1] was an Australian artist, art teacher, illustrator, painter, printmaker and sculptor.
Juniper was born in the wheat-belt town of Merredin, Western Australia. He studied commercial art and industrial design at Beckenham School of Art, England. After returning to Western Australia he painted, taught and exhibited in Perth. He was particularly championed by Rose Skinner, a local exhibitor.[2] He was a long-term resident of Darlington and at different stages in its history involved with the Darlington Arts Festival.
Juniper taught art at Perth College and Hale School in the 1950s, and at Guildford Grammar School in the 1960s.[1] In the 1960s his excursions into the Australian outback with Ian Parkes was the inspiration for the subject matter a large part of his abstract style of art.
He designed the coat of arms for the Commonwealth Law Courts in Perth, in 1992. His works are held in numerous collections, including the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Queensland Art Gallery and Parliament House, Canberra
Juniper was given many solo and group exhibitions throughout Australia and overseas, including a major retrospective in 1999 at the Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth.
He was represented for many years by Gomboc Gallery. Right up until shortly before his death at the age of 83, he continued to paint regularly, with increasing 'hands-on' assistance from his wife[1] and remained both a highly productive artist and an inspiration and mentor to many other Australian artists.
Juniper was commissioned to work on a feature window in the restored Bunbury Catholic Cathedral. This work was completed in 2011.[3]
In 2002, Juniper suffered a stroke that robbed him of the use of his left hand. He became ill in October 2011 when fluid gathered on his lung. Juniper died at his Darlington home on 20 December 2012 at the age of 83.[4]
Juniper was married three times and had four children, all by his first wife, Robin-Ann (née Brennan): Sato (previously Linda); Ben (Benedict); Sam (previously Damian) and Bec (Rebecca). They all live and work as professionals in various fields in Western Australia. He had 11 grandchildren and step-grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. His second wife is Amanda (née Silburn) and his third wife is Patricia (née Lowe).