David Fairbairn (artist)

David Fairbairn (born 1949), is an Australian painter and printmaker who was the winner of the Dobell Prize for Drawing in 1999. He has been selected as a Dobell Prize Finalist fifteen times, won the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize in 2002 and has been exhibited in the Archibald Prize eight times. Fairbairn teaches at the National Art School, Sydney.[1]

Personal life

David Fairbairn was born in Zambia, Africa in 1949. Following his schooling he did an honours degree in Fine Art then earned a postgraduate scholarship to Royal Academy School of Art, London, attending from 1974-1977. He moved to Australia in 1979. He lives in Wedderburn, a small town on the Georges River south of Sydney, with his wife, the artist and Dobell Prize winner, Suzanne Archer, who is featured in much of his work.[2]

Career

After a legal dispute between the Tweed Shire Council and the administrators of the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize resulted in the earliest winning artworks being separated from others, [3] Fairbairn's 2002 winning portrait of his wife is the earliest displayed in the current Moran prize collection.

Fairbairn's most recent Art work was the one that he called Large head JB no 1

gollark: This furniture budget thing probably doesn't add up to a significant amount of the total spend, so it's a bad comparison.
gollark: Apparently American healthcare spending is something like 17% of GDP for some insane reason. So it would be a big fraction of the government budget, if they ran it as efficiently as it currently operated.
gollark: Possibly. Paying people if they want to move out seems more reasonable than doing stupid things to local property markets, or whatever, or adjusting taxes so those already there can afford it.
gollark: That doesn't mean the cost can't/shouldn't be *reduced*.
gollark: Instead of incentivizing people to stay there and driving up the price.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 10 August 2013. Retrieved 3 April 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Dougherty, Scott (21 March 2012). "Wedderburn artist eyes Archibald Prize". Campbelltown Macarthur Advertiser.
  3. Verghis, Sharon (28 July 2004). "Reputation restored in leaner frame". Sydney Morning Herald.
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