C1930

Sketch “Avoca”

Signed etching numbered 39 from an edition of 50 by Squire Morgan. Little is known of Morgan’s activities from 1911 to 1921. His later membership of the London based Society of Graphic Arts suggests he may have been resident in the … Read Full Description

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S/N: PM-SMORGAN-003–228162
(B001)
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Details

Full Title:

Sketch “Avoca”

Date:

C1930

Condition:

Printers crease lower right, otherwise in good condition.

Technique:

Etching printed in sepia.

Image Size: 

150mm 
x 75mm

Paper Size: 

230mm 
x 136mm
AUTHENTICITY
Sketch "Avoca" - Vintage Print from 1930

Guaranteed Vintage Item
dated:

1930

Description:

Signed etching numbered 39 from an edition of 50 by Squire Morgan. Little
is known of Morgan’s activities from 1911 to 1921. His later
membership of the London based Society of Graphic Arts suggests he
may have been resident in the UK sometime during this period.

Collections:
National Gallery of Australia: LEGACY ID 1000011232

James Squire Morgan (1886 - 1974)

Morgan was an artist educated at Sydney Grammar School and Sydney’s Fort Street High School. Not long after leaving school he decided to become an artist, and from 1905 to 1909 he studied with Julian Ashton and Sydney Long at the Sydney Art School (later known as the Julian Ashton Art School). By this time Morgan seems to have been known personally, and professionally, as Squire Morgan. While his relationship with the influential Julian Ashton is unknown, Morgan was clearly on good terms with Long, and during the early 1920’s acted as his agent in Sydney. Morgan’s debut as an artist was at the Society of Artists’ (SOA) 1908 spring show at the Society’s rooms at Sydney’s Queen Victoria Markets, where he exhibited five works. Morgan works focused mainly on landscape views of the New South Wales coast and Sydney’s rural hinterland. Popular sketching spots included Sydney’s northern beaches, especially Dee Why, and the Canberra region. He is represented in numerous institutional collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, Art Gallery of NSW, Mitchell Library, and National Library of Australia.

View other items by James Squire Morgan

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