Banksia

By Artists' Donations
Medium:
Pencil & Ink
Edition size:
Unique

This drawing by Barbara Tribe was generously donated by Mike Werbicki.

Born in Sydney, Barbara Tribe studied sculpture under Rayner Hoff at East Sydney Technical College, and in 1935, aged 22, she became the first woman and first sculptor to receive the New South Wales Travelling Art Scholarship, which she used to come to England. Here she continued her studies, starting first at the RA Schools, London. Soon after WWII, Barbara visited West Cornwall and fell in love with it, taking up a part-time post teaching at the Penzance School of Art, where her husband also taught ceramics. In 1947, after purchasing a former Baptist Sunday School in Sheffield near Penzance while on holiday, the couple married in London, and moved to West Cornwall permanently.

'The theme of organic growth attracts me - the cycle of life - anything that stirs and lives; the human figure, animals, birds, plants, insects.  My work, traditional or semi-abstract, retains the human touch.'  Working in all materials, from terracotta, bronze, stone, wood to metal and ceramics, she believed form to be most important, observing the contours and material when creating her works: 'I try to look at things as though seeing for the first time.' Barbara's curiosity led her to embark on a study of aboriginal art, and prompted her to travel extensively in later life. She always kept in close touch with her Australian roots, and after her retirement from the Penzance School of Art in 1988, she returned there on many occasions.

Banksia