Curio

State Library of New South Wales

Waterfall on the road to Bathurst Oct 20 1851

DG SV1B / 11
Watercolour

During the 1850s-1860s, English-born etcher and illustrator Frederick Charles Terry (1825-1869) was known as one of the most accomplished artists in the colony. His carefully detailed watercolour paintings depicting Sydney’s life, landscapes and surrounds provide a fascinating historical record of the early days of the colony.

‘Waterfall on the road to Bathurst Oct [i.e. October]’ illustrates a view point on the Bathurst road, near a convict built station called the ‘Weather Board Inn.’ In this image, the artist depicts a gorge where the bushland was so dense, that Europeans believed ‘no man had ever walked [on the land] before.’ This virgin landscape is revealed in a golden light that’s diffused by a misty haze falling over the rugged cliffs and into the deep valleys.

Terry’s landscapes typically feature people, animals, birds and some form of activity.* Whether Terry actually ventured into the Blue Mountains is unknown; however the comparatively accurate depiction of the Mountain’s suggests that that they were painted from life.

Footnotes

*Australian Dictionary of Biography

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/terry-frederick-casemero-4701

Artist Oswald Rose Campbell described Frederick Terry’s illustrations as  'the best productions of the kind that I have seen in Sydney — clear and characteristic in drawing and beautifully composed … they would be greatly prized in London'.*

*Australian Dictionary of Biography 

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/campbell-oswald-rose-3157

The 1857 engraving by Walter Mason titled View of the valley of the waterfall, Mount Victoria, on the road to Bathurst, New South Wales is remarkably similar to this watercolour, albeit from a different geographical perspective.

The Australian picture pleasure book: illustrating the scenery, architecture, historical events, natural history, public characters &c., of Australia

Walter G Mason

Sydney: JR Clarke, 1857

In 1855 Frederick Terry’s work was selected to be exhibited alongside Conrad Martens, George French Angas and Adelaide Ironside in Paris, as one of the earliest group exhibitions of Australian work in Europe.*

 *Australian Dictionary of Biography 

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/terry-frederick-casemero-4701