Vale Charles Blackman OBE [1928-2018]

“Charles Blackman was an extraordinary artist who made work that helped forge an Australian visual language of the 20th century. As a National Art School alumni he will be sorely missed, but his enduring visual language and mastery of the medium will live on.” – Steven Alderton, Director and CEO, National Art School.
 
The National Art School would like to pay tribute to alumnus Charles Blackman OBE, one of the most original and significant Australian artists of the post-war era. As a teenager, Blackman worked as an illustrator and subeditor’s copyboy at Sydney Newspaper the Sun before studying night classes at East Sydney Technical College for three years, from 1943 to 1946. He moved to Melbourne, where he co-founded the Melbourne Contemporary Art Society (CAS) and was one of the seven artists responsible for the 1959 Antipodean Manifesto, which protested the dominance and rise of abstract expressionism and non-figurative art. He gained recognition as a critically important artist with his Schoolgirl and Alice in Wonderland series of paintings.
After winning the Helena Rubenstein Scholarship in 1960, Blackman lived in London for six years, where his work was exhibited in the Tate Gallery exhibitions of Australian art in 1962-63. In 1970, Blackman was awarded a studio at La Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris, where he lived and worked for a year. Afterwards, he would often return to Paris as a source of inspiration.
His work was described as romantic, poetic, enchanting and melancholic, exploring human relationships, dreams and memories. Blackman himself described it as ‘more feeling than art’.
 
A major retrospective of his work, Schoolgirls and Angels, was organised by the National Gallery of Victoria in 1993, and toured to Sydney, Brisbane and Perth. The NGV also held a major exhibition of his Alice in Wonderland paintings in 2006.
Blackman was presented with an OBE in 1977 in recognition of his service to the arts, and in 2010, the Art Series chain of hotels opened The Blackman in St Kilda Road, Melbourne. Celebrating his 90th birthday only a week ago, Blackman had continued to draw, even after moving into an aged care facility earlier this year. The National Art School extends condolences to the artist’s family and friends.
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We are pleased to share the exciting news that we are introducing a new BFA (Hons) degree at the National Art School in 2026.

The Bachelor of Fine Art (Honours) is an intensive one-year program designed for graduates of the BFA who are ready to deepen their studio practice and expand their academic and professional capabilities. This course is ideal for emerging artists who want to refine their practice, build industry connections, and prepare for postgraduate study or professional opportunities in the creative sector.

New scholarships will be available to students entering the BFA (Hons), with further details to be shared later this year. For more information and key dates, visit futurestudents.nas.edu.au (link in bio).
Join us for free 18+ concert 'Afterglow' – The Neighbour at the Gate exhibition closing party.

Headlined by Miss Kaninna, the event features performances by HYLANDER, Rocky Stallone, BRINA, Kuya Hennessy, and DJ Court Jester. RSVP today as tickets are going fast!

Afterglow 
Thursday 16 October 
Doors: 4.30pm
Concert starts: 7.00pm
Cell Block Theatre, National Art School

Please note: if the Cell Block reaches capacity, you’re welcome to enjoy the concert from the courtyard until space opens up inside. Food trucks and pop up bar.

FREE ADMISSION, RSVP is essential due to limited capacity (link in bio)
Congratulations to NAS Short Courses Painting Lecturer Michelle Hiscock (@michellelouisemariehiscock) for winning the 2025 Portia Geach Memorial Award with her work, 'The Weather Watcher after Zurbarán'. 

The Portia Geach Memorial Award is the pre-eminent portraiture prize for women in Australia, established by Florence Kate Geach in memory of her sister in 1965. 

An exhibition of all finalists’ works is open for public viewing at the S.H. Ervin Gallery (@shervingallery) in The Rocks, Sydney, from Friday 19 September until Sunday 2 November.

Visit shop.nas.edu.au (link in bio) to book now for Term 4 Short Courses. Summer School Short Courses in January 2026 will open for booking from Friday 3 October. 

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Michelle Hiscock, 'The Weather Watcher after Zurbarán', 2025, oil on linen, 50 x 40 cm, courtesy of the artist and the S.H. Ervin Gallery (The Rocks, Sydney)
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