Bernice Agar b. 1885 Bowen, North Qld.

Also known as née Agar Bernice Hardie
  • Artist (Photographer)
Glamorous and highly accomplished photographer best known for her images of Sydney socialites and brides. Such was her skill that when she retired upon marriage Cato claims 'the leading camera men of this country breathed a sigh of relief'.
Name
Bernice Agar
Also known as née Agar Bernice Hardie
Birth date
1885
Birth place
Bowen, North Qld.
Death date
1976
Death place
Edgecliff, Sydney, NSW
Gender
Unspecified
Roles
  • Artist (Photographer)
Residence
  • c.1918- c.1976 Sydney, NSW
  • Toowoomba, Qld.
  • c.1885 Bowen, North Qld.
Other Occupation
  • Professional photographer
Active Period
  • c.1885- c.1933
Languages
  • English
Training
  • Bain Photographic Studios, Toowoomba, Qld.
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Heritage: The National Women's Art Book

photographer, was born in Bowen, North Queensland, youngest daughter of Isobel and William Agar. She trained at the Bain Photographic Studios in Toowoomba, run by James and Annie Bain, becoming their chief photographer. In 1918 she moved to Sydney and opened her own studio at Denison House, George Street, where she employed several people, including her sister Alice as a retoucher.

Agar’s stylish portrait photographs – with strong, dramatic cross lighting and theatrical, almost unnatural, poses – appeared regularly in Sydney magazines such as Home and Society in the 1920s. These photographs (of brides, society misses and 'wannabes’) are highly distinctive, each unmistakably Agar’s work although revealing very little about the sitter. Her niece recalls that Agar herself was as glamorous as any of her photographs – as is evident from her self portrait.

In April 1933 Agar 'slipped off quietly’ and married James W. Hardie, an accountant. Not for her the wispy veils and long bridal trains of the brides she had photographed:

She wore a frock of parchment satin covered with a velvet coat of the same shade with a lovely collar of sable, into which she had tucked a spray of orchids. Her small brown velvet hat matched her furs, and the 'tout ensemble’ was very charming indeed.

Agar subsequently retired from her photographic career. At this, according to Cato, 'the leading camera men of this country breathed a sigh of relief’. She died at Edgecliff, Sydney, in 1976.

Writers:
Callaway, Anita
Date written:
1995
Last updated:
2011
child of
Isobel Agar
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
William Agar
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
sibling of
Alice Agar
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
spouse of
James W. Hardie
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
James Bain
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Annie Bain
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Margel Ina Hinder
1906
Artist (Sculptor)
associate of
Marjory Francesca McCrae
1905
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Bertha Sloane
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Bain Photographic Studios
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Citations:
  • Gillespie, Christine, (1981), Australian Women Photographers 1890-1950, (Place: George Paton Gallery catalogue, Parkville, Vic.)
  • Cato, Jack, (1955), The Story of the Camera in Australia, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.)
  • Hall, Barbara / Mather, Jenni, (1986), Australian Women Photographers 1840-1960, (Place: Richmond, Vic.)
See also:
  • IMAGE: Clara Butt Rutherford, 1921, gelatin silver, National Library of Australia PIC P663
  • PORTRAIT: Bernice Agar, Self Portrait, photograph (National Gallery of Australia). Courtesy Barbara Hall
  • Heritage: ADD section 6, plate 238