George Gittoes Art Diaries (2001-2014)
MLMSS 9589
Commercial sketchbooks with collage, pen and paint.
These heavy sketchbooks
have travelled the world with Gittoes, through war zones in Afghanistan, Iraq
and Kuwait, while working in Berlin, Norway and New York, on holiday and at
home in Australia. They have been used as a clearing-house for a mind bursting
with ideas. Each diary bears a distinctive graphic cover. Inside, the immediacy
of handwriting, mark making, sketching, doodling and collage jumps off the
page. The Library’s catalogue describes them as diaries, but they are also
artworks, film notes, business records, scrapbooks, family albums.
A Visual Response to the 'War on Terrorism'
State Library of New South Wales has recently acquired
visual art diaries from 2001 to 2014 from the Australian artist George
Gittoes. These standard issue sized A3
sketchbooks contain the creative process of an extraordinary artist.
Painter, printmaker, film maker,
performance artist, photographer George Gittoes was one of the artists involved
in Sydney's Yellow House and established a career as a significant Australian
artist. George is represented in many of Australia’s national collections and
in a range of regional art gallery collections.
He has also been recognised through an Honorary Doctor of Letters, UNSW in 2011, awarded an Order of Australia in 1997 and
recipients of the Blake and Wynne Prizes.
However since the early 1990’s
George has been committed to developing a visual response to the early 21st
century's ‘War on Terrorism’.
For researchers now and in the future the visual
diaries reveal the germs of ideas that then develop in to fully-fledged
creative projects and as with all brainstorming the ideas that got away, hit
dead ends and did not evolve. The albums are important for the inspiration of
Gittoes art practise but also the dogged hard work and ‘perspiration’ of seeing
projects to fruition. Scrapbook style
you see the correspondence with broadcasters, interview questions for the films
and shooting schedules butted up against drawings, collages and journal style
writing.
Discipline & Practise
These diaries do reveal that the discipline and
practise of keeping a visual diary are central to the creative output of George
Gittoes. The graphic illustrations on
the covers – distinguishes the diaries from each other. Looking through more
than 30 volumes you are also struck by the sheer consistency of Gittoes work,
apart from the subject matter (the political leaders, the war zone or the
fashion) the technique of drawing, writing, collating have remained the
same.
More than anything the
diaries represent an artist responding to the war zones he is working and
living in. They cement him as a war
artist of international repute documenting his struggle to represent in any way
possible all that he is experiencing. Gittoes
continuous endeavour to reveal the horror and complexity of war is
remarkable.