Frank Wesley

Frank Wesley (1923-2002) was an internationally recognised Indian-Australian artist.[1]

Frank Wesley
BornDecember 1923
Died2002
Known forPainting, drawing, wood carvings
Notable work
Blue Madonna, Forgiving Father

Biography

Wesley was born in Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh into a fifth generation Christian family of Hindu and Muslim descent.[1] Wesley studied painting at the Lucknow School of Arts and Crafts.[1] He continued on to postgraduate studies at the same college, and worked as faculty.[1] He spent five years (1954-1958) at the College of Fine Arts in Kyoto, Japan, where he studied art, especially wood block printing.[1]

After two years (1958-1960) in the United States at the Art Institute of Chicago, Wesley returned to India.[1] He moved to Australia in 1973 and lived in Nambour, Queensland. He died in 2002.

Work

Wesley belongs to the Lucknow school of painting. His paintings reflect this influence and that of the Chughtai school of painting that flourished in India at the turn of the century.[2] Wesley made art based on both biblical and secular themes. He used water colours, oil paintings, miniatures and wooden carvings.

Wesley's painting "Blue Madonna" was used for the first UNICEF Christmas card, while five of his paintings were exhibited at the 1950 Holy Year Exhibition in the Vatican.[3] He is also known for designing the funeral urn for Mahatma Gandhi's ashes.[4]

In 1993, Naomi Wray published a book titled "Frank Wesley: Exploring faith with a brush" about his Christian work.[1][5]

gollark: I mean, if I were being more consistent, which I probably should be, we should maybe... not have rule 4, in its current form? Probably the imagery bit due to things I already outlined, but better methods for handling "textual conversation which makes me uncomfortable" than just not having it which would generalize to other things.
gollark: Workplace-wise it is more visible from a distance, I think.
gollark: Imagery has more of that "horribly scarred for life instantly" thing going for it which you can probably avoid with text.
gollark: What are you responding to here?
gollark: Yes, this is mostly the sort of "take things as personal attacks" thing I don't like.

References

  1. "New Page 1". www.frankwesleyart.com. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  2. http://www.postkiwi.com/2005/frank-wesley-indian-artist/
  3. http://www.asianchristianart.org/art_wesley.htm
  4. http://www.asianchristianart.org/art_wesley.htm
  5. Wray, Naomi, 1928- (1993). Frank Wesley : exploring faith with a brush. Auckland, N.Z.: Pace. ISBN 0-9597971-6-5. OCLC 30447082.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)


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