Nutter Buzacott b. 1905 Perth, Western Australia

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Also known as:
  • Nutter Taylor Buzacott
  • N. Vellis
  • Nutter Buzzacot
  • Zub
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator) , (Printmaker) , (Painter)
Widely travelled mid 20th century Perth born, Melbourne and Brisbane based painter, printmaker, political illustrator and commercial artist.
Name
Nutter Buzacott
Also known as:
  • Nutter Taylor Buzacott
  • N. Vellis
  • Nutter Buzzacot
  • Zub
Birth date
1905
Birth place
Perth, Western Australia
Death date
August 1976
Death place
South Tweed, New South Wales
Burial place
South Tweed, New South Wales
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
  • Artist (Printmaker)
  • Artist (Painter)
Residence
  • c.1965- c.1976 South Tweed, New South Wales
  • c.1949- c.1965 Wynnum, Brisbane, Queensland
  • c.1938- c.1949 Warrandyte, Victoria
  • 1936- 1938 England, UK
  • 1924- 1926 Sydney, New South Wales
  • c.1910- c.1924 Caulfield, Melbourne, Victoria
  • c.1910- c.1924 Kalgoorlie, Western Australia
  • c.1905- c.1910 Perth, Western Australia
  • c.1910- c.1949 Melbourne, Victoria
Other Occupation
  • Art teacher
Active Period
  • c.1924- c.1976
Languages
  • English
Training
  • 1936- 1938 Grosvenor School, London, England, UK
  • 1924- 1926 Julian Ashton's Sydney Art School, Sydney, New South Wales
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Black and white artists

painter, printmaker, illustrator and commercial artist, was born in Perth. After his father died he moved to Melbourne with his mother to join his grandfather, a noted seascape painter, at Caulfield but spent his holidays with his grandmother at Kalgoorlie. He later remembered the impression that the isolated, barren life of the Kalgoorlie miners had on him. In Melbourne he attended Wesley College, where he was a champion athlete.

He attended a commercial art college (Leyshon White) and left Melbourne to study commercial art in Sydney (1924-26), working at Farmers during the day and studying at Julian Ashton 's Sydney Art School at night. After returning to Melbourne he drew fashion designs for various commercial art studios and became friends with a young developing group of commercial artists, including James Flett , Dominic Leon and Mervyn Wallis. Together they began experimenting with various printing methods, especially linocut, lithography and etching.

In October 1930 Buzacott helped found Strife , a magazine that lasted only one issue before being banned by the police. He drew woodcuts in it as 'N. Vellis’. In 1930 he exhibited with The Embryos, and in 1931 Buzacott, Dalgarno , Flett, Eric Thake , R.V. Francis, J. Vickery and Bill Dolphin, calling themselves 'The New Group’, held an exhibition at the Athenaeum Gallery. All except Dolphin (a violin maker), showed prints, drawings or oils. Buzacott was then sharing a studio with Noel Counihan and Roy Dalgarno and had become increasingly attracted to Marxist ideals. He used stark b/w wood and linocuts to convey the mood of the Depression and draw attention to its victims, e.g. Queensland Roadworker c.1931, linocut on tissue paper, NGA, and West Melbourne Street Scene c.1938, wood engraving, QAG, a dark image of cheerful people in slum housing (both ill. Merewether). He often used the pseudonym 'N. Vellis’ for his magazine illustrations too.

In late 1931 Buzacott was a foundation member of the Workers Art Club. In 1933 he met and married Winifred McClintock, Herbert McClintock 's sister. Three years later, he used two small inheritances to travel to England where in 1936-38 he studied with Iain MacNab at the Grosvenor School, London. There he met the Australian painter George Bell , a key figure in the foundation of the CAS where Buzacott was to exhibit, and with whom Buzacott briefly studied during WWII to develop his painting skills (according to McCulloch Buzacott trained with Bell in 1940.)

Buzacott returned home in 1938 and soon moved to Warrandyte, where he shared the late Penleigh Boyd’s studio with for a time. He continued to exhibit with a group formed in Melbourne in 1935, the New Melbourne Art Club, which included Flett, Dalgarno and Heffernan. In 1940 he won the BFAG Crouch Art Prize for a painting. In 1942 he exhibited at the Kadimah cultural centre in Carlton alongside Bergner , Counihan, O’Connor and Wigley .

During WWII he joined the Cartographic Corps of the army stationed in Bendigo and Brisbane. He exhibited in Melbourne with other soldiers known as The Five Group during the 1940s.He sold his paintings only to friends and acquaintances while continuing to make a living from commercial art and from illustrating pamphlets and books, including Alan Marshall’s These Are My People (Cheshire, 1944).

After the war Buzacott became a member of the VAS, along with others who stopped exhibiting with the CAS. By then, he was mainly painting landscapes. In 1949 he moved to Wynnum, near Brisbane, site of an artists’ colony that developed around John Manifold, a communist poet and musician who had fought as a volunteer in the Spanish Civil War. He continued to paint landscapes while employed on commercial art and teaching at QIT. He won the Redcliffe Art Prize in 1969. Later he moved to South Tweed, where he died in 1976.

Some of Buzacott’s paintings combine modernism and realism, e.g. Scene at Doncaster 1940, o/c, BFAG (like US country town painting, ill. Hansen, cat.144, and Merewether, cat.18). His work was included in exhibitions at the AGSA in1984, QAG 1985, McClelland Gallery 1981.

Writers:
Kerr, Joan
LeeDunn
Date written:
1996
Last updated:
2007
associate of
Dominic Leon
1910
Artist (Printmaker)
associate of
Eric Thake
1904
Artist
associate of
Penleigh Boyd
1890
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Edward B. Heffernan
Artist (Printmaker)
associate of
George Bell
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Julian Ashton
Artist
associate of
Vic O'Connor
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
Morris Nutter Buzzacot
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
née Mouncey Leonie Margaret Buzacott
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Mervyn Wallis
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Flett
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
R. V. Francis
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
J. Vickery
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Bill Dolphin
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Iain MacNab
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Josl Bergner
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Jim Wigley
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
spouse of
née McClintock Winifred Buzzacot
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
John Manifold
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Alan Marshall
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Roy Frederick Leslie Dalgarno
1910
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
James Flett
1906
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Jack Maughan
1897
Artist, Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Herbert McClintock
1906
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
relative of
Herbert McClintock
1906
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
brother-in-law
associate of
James V. Wigley
1917
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Contemporary Art Society
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Victorian Artists' Society
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
The New Group
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
New Melbourne Art Club
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Workers Art Club
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Victorian Artists' Society exhibition
None
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Victorian Artists' Society Gallery, Melbourne, Victoria
Redcliffe Art Contest
1966
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Brisbane, QLD
The L. J. Harvey Memorial Prize for Drawing
1969
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, QLD
HC Richards Memorial Prize for Painting
1966
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, QLD
Warana-Caltex Oil & Watercolour Contest
1965
Exhibition ()
City Botanic Gardens, Brisbane, QLD
D.A. Heiser and Nutter Buzacott
September 1961
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Travel in Art Gallery, Brisbane, QLD
Queensland Artists of Fame and Promise : 2nd Annual Exhibition
1953
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Brisbane, QLD
Exhibition of Queensland Art
10 September 1951
Exhibition ()
Queensland National Art Gallery, Brisbane, QLD
Nutter Buzacott
10 October 1950
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Moreton Galleries, Brisbane, QLD
Nutter Buzacott
September 1949
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Moreton Galleries, Brisbane, QLD
[Group exhibition]
1942
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Kadimah Cultural Centre, Carlton, Melbourne, Victoria
Annual Exhibition
1939
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Contemporary Group, Sydney, NSW
The New Group
1931
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, Victoria
Recognitions
Citations:
  • Bell School books
  • Marshall, Alan, (1944), These Are My People, (Place: Melbourne, Vic : Cheshire (1944 edition illustrated by Buzacott))
  • Hansen, David, (1988), The face of Australia : the land & the people : the past & the present, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Fine Arts Press)
  • Robb, Gwenda; & Smith, Elaine, (1993), Concise dictionary of Australian artists, (Place: Carlton, Vic : Melbourne University Press)
  • Western Australia Birth Records : 6110, (Place: Western Australia)
  • Smith, Bernard, (1993), Noel Counihan : artist and revolutionary, (Place: Melbourne, Vic : Oxford University Press)
  • Merewether, Charles (ed.), (1984), Art and Social Commitment : an end to the city of dreams, 1931-1948, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Art Gallery of New South Wales)
  • McCulloch, Alan; & McCulloch, Susan, (1994), Encyclopedia of Australian art, (Place: St Leonards, NSW : Allen & Unwin)