Hans Heysen | |
Birth Name: | Wilhelm Ernst Hans Franz Heysen |
Birth Date: | 1877 10, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Hamburg, Germany |
Death Place: | Mount Barker, South Australia |
Nationality: | Australian |
Movement: | Adelaide Easel Club |
Field: | Painting |
Patrons: | H H Wigg, W L Davidson, F A Joyner, Charles Henry de Rose |
Sir Hans Heysen (8 October 18772 July 1968) was an Australian artist.
One of Australia's best known landscape painters,[1] Heysen became a household name during his lifetime for his watercolours and oil paintings of the Australian bush, in particular men and animals toiling among monumental gum trees against a background of atmospheric light.[2] He also won acclaim for his groundbreaking depictions of arid landscapes in the Flinders Ranges. He won the Wynne Prize for landscape painting a record nine times.
Wilhelm Ernst Hans Franz Heysen was born in Hamburg, Germany. He migrated to Adelaide in South Australia with his family in 1884 at the age of 7. As a young boy Heysen showed an early interest in art. At 14 he left school to work with a hardware merchant, later taking night classes at the Academy of Arts in Victoria Buildings, Victoria Square, under James Ashton. He joined the Adelaide Easel Club in 1897 and was immediately recognised as a rising talent.[3]
At age 20 he was sponsored by a group of wealthy Adelaide art enthusiasts E. S. Wigg, H. H. Wigg and brothers-in-law W. L. Davidson, F. A. Joyner, and miner Charles Henry de Rose, to study art for four years in France.[4]
By 1912 Hans Heysen had earned enough from his art to purchase a property called "The Cedars" -35.0127°N 138.8057°W near Hahndorf in the Adelaide Hills, which was his home until his death in 1968 aged 90. "The Cedars", named for its massive Himalayan cedars, has changed little since the 1920s. It remains the property of the Heysen family, but most areas, including Hans's and Nora's studios, are open to the public 10:00 to 16:30 Tuesday to Sunday, and holiday Mondays, except Christmas Day; guided tours 11:00 and 14:00.[5]
Heysen married Selma "Sallie" Bartels (1878–1962) on 15 December 1904. Her father was Adolph H. F. Bartels, a former Mayor of Adelaide.Their children were Josephine, Freya, Lilian, Nora, David, Deirdre, Michael, and Stefan.[5] Daughter Nora Heysen also became a successful artist.
Heysen won the Wynne Prize nine times, for the following works: