Alphonse Pellion (1796–1868) was an artist on an official French Pacific expedition, led by Louis de Freycinet, which called into Sydney in November 1819. Meeting two Aboriginal men, Tara and Peroa, near the Nepean River, he made a quick field sketch of them. The lively watercolour shows two full-length males, naked apart from their European jackets. It was later prepared for publication—its rough edges being smoothed into the black and white lines necessary to translate it into a print.
At some point it was decided not to go ahead with its publication. Instead,
Tara’s head and shoulders were selected for inclusion in the print, Sauvages
des environs de la rivière Nepean, published in the official account of the
voyage, Voyage autour du monde (1824). In this hand-coloured print,
Tara’s eyes—blue in the original watercolour—are now brown. The left arm of his
jacket, which is complete in the original watercolour, is now torn and jagged at
the top, for better pictorial effect. The new processes subtly changed the
impact of the original drawing. Its directness was replaced by a smooth
romanticism, which is, nonetheless, a much more sympathetic view of Aboriginal
people than that being expressed by English colonists at the time.
Display item Tara and Peroa, 1819
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