Ira Forbes Smith b. 1920

Also known as:
  • Ira Forbes-Smith
  • Ira Kentish
  • Artist (Painter) , (Textile Artist / Fashion Designer)
Designer, painter and craft worker Ira Forbes Smith (1920-1994) was one of a number of women who were active and influential in the shaping of Perth's cultural life up to and immediately after World War II.
Name
Ira Forbes Smith
Also known as:
  • Ira Forbes-Smith
  • Ira Kentish
Birth date
1920
Death date
18 February 1994
Death place
Western Australia, Keysbrook Farm, near Perth, WA
Death note
Keysbrook Farm near perth
Gender
Female
Roles
  • Artist
  • Artist (Painter)
  • Artist (Textile Artist / Fashion Designer)
Residence
  • 1952- 1994 Keysbrook, WA
Other Occupation
  • teacher
Languages
  • English
Training
  • Saturday morning classes, 1934- 1939 Perth School of Art
  • studied General Art, 1943- 1945 Perth Technical School
  • studied Commercial Art, 1941- 1943 Perth Technical School
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Heritage: The National Women's Art Book

designer, studied Commercial Art (1941-43) and General Art (1943-45) at the Perth Technical School and graduated with a State Art Teachers Certificate. She had developed an interest in design at secondary school encouraged by her art teacher, the painter Margaret Saunders , who taught her to design from her own drawings and to work out the repeats for printing. During her last four years at school (1934-39) she also attended Saturday morning classes held by Saunders at the Perth School of Art. Forbes Smith’s first exhibited works were two designs for needlework – Roses and Violets – shown when she was nineteen at the 1939 Annual Exhibition of the Society of Women Painters (established by Saunders in 1935). By 1941 she had consciously turned away from what she identified as the 'Englishness’ of such subjects and had found that her strongest work came from direct observation.

Many of the women in the Society of Women Painters were skilled in a variety of media and they developed a teaching network, both formal and informal via the membership. Forbes Smith learnt china painting through the Society, as well as pottery and leatherwork. There are similarities between the stylised wildflower designs used by fellow Society member Amy Peirl (née Harvey) on china and Forbes Smith’s textile designs. In 1947 she exhibited oil paintings with Amy Peirl (china painting) and Ethel Sanders (watercolours). Although WA did not have a Society of Arts and Crafts like other states, it can be said that the Women Painters fulfilled much the same role in terms of peer support and networks, albeit only for women. The Society is still in operation, having become incorporated in 1945 under a new name, the WA Women’s Society of Fine Arts and Crafts.

None of the designs in Forbes Smith’s folio were ever printed. At the time she was producing them the war prevented it. After the war Mrs Dell Johnson, a mantle manufacturer from Perth who had moved to Adelaide, expressed interest in her designs but nothing finally came of it. To pursue a career in textile design after the war Ira would have had to leave WA as the manufacturing base and expertise were simply not there. As a rather shy, unmarried, young woman this was something she did not contemplate. She therefore began teaching. She also received recognition as a painter, being invited to join the Studio Club, an informal but professional group of established women artists, in 1945 and the Perth Society of Artists in 1948.

After her marriage in 1952 to Herbert Clem Kentish, Ira lived at their Keysbrook farm, about sixty-five kilometres from Perth. She continued to be active locally as a painter, designer and craftworker while bringing up three children. She was one of a number of women who were active and influential in the shaping of Perth’s cultural life up to and immediately after World War II. Ira Kentish died at Keysbrook on 18 February 1994. To my knowledge she was the only one of her peers to be producing textile designs of such quality in WA, or indeed at all.

Writers:
Story, Holly
Date written:
1995
Last updated:
2011
associate of
Margaret Saunders
1890
Artist (Painter)
associate of
née Harvey Amy Peirl
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Ethel Sanders
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Mrs Dell Johnson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
spouse of
Herbert Clem Kentish
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
WA Women's Society of Fine Arts and Crafts
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Studio Club
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Society of Women Painters
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Perth Society of Artists
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Violets
Date
1939
Roses
Date
1939
Annual Exhibition of the Society of Women Painters
1939
Exhibition (exhibited at)
None
Citations:
  • (1993), Conversations with Ira Forbes Smith August 1993
  • Erickson, Dorothy, (2000), Art and Design in Western Australia: Perth Technical College 1900-2000, (Place: Perth Technical College)
See also:
  • ADD section 11, plate 489