John Perceval b. 1923 Bruce Rock, WA, Australia

Also known as:
  • John De Burgh Perceval
  • Linwood Robert Steven South
  • Artist (Painter) , (Ceramist)
John Perceval had little formal training as an artist, but after he fell ill with polio at the age of 15 he concentrated on painting and drawing. He came to know the Boyd family and the Angry Penguins circle of Heide Park and they were the greatest influence on his developing style.
Name
John Perceval
Also known as:
  • John De Burgh Perceval
  • Linwood Robert Steven South
Birth date
1 February 1923
Birth place
Bruce Rock, WA, Australia
Death date
15 October 2000
Death place
Williamstown, Melbourne, Vic.
Burial place
Brighton Cemetery, Brighton, Melbourne, Vic.
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Painter)
  • Artist (Ceramist)
Residence
  • 1923- 1934 Bruce Rock, WA, Australia
  • 1934- 1941 Melbourne, Vic.
  • 1941- 1954 Murrumbeena, Vic.
  • c.1954- c.1976 Williamstown, Melbourne, Victoria
  • 1977- 1986 Larundal, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
  • c.1986- 2000 Melbourne, Vic.
Active Period
  • c.1940- c.1999
Languages
  • English
Training
  • Worked with, c.1940- c.1945 Angry Penguin group, Heide Park, VIC, Australia
  • worked with family and learnt ceramics, c.1940- c.1954 Murrumbeena, Vic.
  • painting and drawing, 1949 National Gallery School, Melbourne, Vic.
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Legacy data. Source 'unknown'
  • Powerhouse Museum

John Perceval was born on 1 February 1923 with the name Linwood Robert Steven South Bruce Rock in Western Australia. His father, Robert South, was a wheat farmer, a man well known for his hard work and violent temper. His parents’ marriage was short-lived. His mother, born Dorothy Dolton, left when the boy was only 18 months old, with his older sister unhappily stayed with their father until 1934 when their mother married William de Burgh Perceval in Melbourne. John Perceval took his stepfather’s name, and began to attend Trinity Grammar. At the age of 15 he suffered from polio, and spent a year in hospital. As a part of his recovery he began to paint.He came to know the artists associated with Melbourne’s newly established Contemporary Art Society, and through them joined the circle of artists and writers around John and Sunday Reed at Heide Park. Despite his withered leg John Perceval enlisted in the Army as his skills as a draughtsman could be used in the Cartographic Company. Here he met Arthur Boyd, and then the entire extended Boyd family at Murrumbeena. He married Arthur’s youngest sister, Mary Boyd, in 1944. With Arthur Boyd and Neil Douglas he worked at the Murrumbeena pottery, making decorated pots and bowls. His paintings of this period show a strong influence of Arthur Boyd’s work, with a joyeus brush stroke and an almost naive quality.
The Perceval family lived at Williamstown, at the old naval port on the mouth of the Yarra and the working harbour became a part of his subject matter. His subject matter was sometimes metaphorical, but always based in elements of his life. The city of Melbourne became the background for a nativity scene, painted in a style that quoted Breughel. His children: Matthew, Tessa, Celia and Alice all appear as reoccurring elements in his art. No more is this more evident than in his series of ceramic angels, made between 1957 and 1962. While they certainly quoted Renaissance sculptural figures and Piero della Francesca’s paintings, the joie de vivre of these (sometimes) quite naughty figures owes more to his observations of his children – although one is modelled on the satirist Barry Humphries.
In 1959, Perceval was persuaded by Bernard Smith to join with his brothers-in-law Arthur and David Boyd, John Brack, Robert Dickerson, Charles Blackman and Clifton Pugh to form the Antipodeans a celebration of the human figure, in opposition to the rise of abstract art. His own paintings however concentrated on landscapes, and increasingly he found more nourishment from Vincent Van Gogh than any other artist.
Perceval’s bad memories, alcoholism and long undiagnosed psychiatric illness meant that life was less than easy for his family and his marriage ended unhappily. In 1965 he was hospitalised for alcoholism, and in 1977 he entered the Larundal psychiatric hospital, where he stayed until 1986.
Perceval continued to paint for the rest of his life, but although he had some commercial success, these later works appear crude when placed next to his paintings of the 1940s and ’50s.

Writers:
Staff Writer
mendej
Date written:
1999
Last updated:
2012
associate of
Sunday Reed
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
John Reed
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Barry Humphries
1934
Artist (Mixed Media Artist), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Yosl Bergner
1920
Artist (Painter)
associate of
Arthur Boyd
1920
Artist (Painter), Artist (Draughtsman)
brother-in-law
spouse of
Mary Boyd
1926
Artist (Ceramist), Artist (Photographer), Artist (Painter)
relative of
Guy Boyd
1923
Artist (Sculptor)
relative of
Jamie Boyd
1948
Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker)
relative of
David Boyd
1924
Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Ceramist)
associate of
Robert Dickerson
1924
Artist
associate of
Joy Hester
1920
Artist
associate of
John Olsen
1928
Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Designer, Artist (Ceramist)
parent of
Celia Perceval
1949
Artist (Painter)
friend of
Albert Tucker
1914
Artist (Painter), Artist (Photographer), Artist (Ceramist)
associate of
Angry Penguins
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Antipodeans
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Arthur Merric Boyd Pottery
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Farmer And His Wife In A Gladioli Field
Date
1971
Medium
Oil on canvas
61 x 101 cm
The Australian Landscape
1972- 1973
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, SA
"The Australian Landscape" was a national touring exhibition organised by the Australian Gallery Directors' Council in 1972. The organising gallery was the Art Gallery of South Australia, and the curators were Daniel Thomas (Art Gallery of New South Wales) Ian North (Art Gallery of South Australia) and Frances McCarthy [later Lindsay] (National Gallery of Victoria). Generous funding from the Peter Stuyvesant foundation enabled the curators to travel the country together in order to make considered judgements. The exhibition opened at the Art Gallery of South Australia on 3 March 1972, and toured to the Western Australian Art Gallery, National Gallery of Victoria, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Australian National Gallery (temporary premises), Art Gallery of New South Wales, Newcastle City Art Gallery, and the Queensland Art Gallery. The catalogue introduction claims that the exhibition comprised of 'fifty-five of the best Australian landscapes ever executed'. It was characterised by a breadth of vision, with works from every state – including regional galleries and private collections. It is distinguished by having a greater emphasis on colonial works than previous exhibitions, and elevating the reputation of Eugene Von Guerard and John Glover. There were only two works by women – Grace Cossington Smith and Margaret Preston– and none by any Aboriginal artist.
Recognitions
Wynne Prize
1960
Award
Citations:
  • McPhee, John, (2001), obituary, (Place: Australian Art Collector 15 (January-March 2001), 36.)
  • Powerhouse Museum, 'Romulus and Remus with Wolf Mother' by John Perceval, Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, NSW http://from.ph/116925
  • Plant, Margaret, (March 2001), John Perceval 1923-2000, (Art and Australia), Type: article
  • Blackall, David, (2004), John Perceval: an ethical representation of a delinquent angel , (PhD Thesis), Type: other resource http://ro.uow.edu.au/theses/2023/
  • Niall, Brenda, (2002), The Boyds : a family biography, (Place: Carlton South, Vic. : Miegunyah Press, Melbourne University Press)
  • Thomas, D., North, I., & McCarthy F., (1972), The Australian Landscape, (Published by the Art Gallery of South Australia), Type: catalogue