THE LURE OF PARIS #18, 2000

Important Australian + International Fine Art
Melbourne
20 April 2011
28

STEPHEN BUSH

born 1958
THE LURE OF PARIS #18, 2000

oil on canvas

183.0 x 183.0 cm

signed, dated and inscribed verso on stretcher: Stephen Bush 'The Lure of Paris' #18 2000

Estimate: 
$30,000 - 40,000
Sold for $52,800 (inc. BP) in Auction 19 - 20 April 2011, Melbourne
Provenance

Robert Lindsay Gallery, Melbourne (label attached verso)
Private collection, Melbourne

Exhibited

Blackwood Skyline, Stephen Bush: Work in Progress #5, The Ian Potter Museum of Art, The University of Melbourne, 15 Feb – 11 May 2003, cat. 10

Catalogue text

Lure of Paris is arguably the most significant subject in Stephen Bush's repertoire and it is an iconography which underpins the artist's entire project to explore the notions of replication and originality in art. He exhibited his first Lure of Paris at the self-titled exhibition at Robert Lindsay Gallery, Melbourne in July 1994. Lure of Paris #5 was the first work in the exhibition and Lure #1 was in fact placed at no. 4 in a succinct catalogue of only seven works, five of which were dedicated to the subject. All quasi replicas of each other depicting an abseiling Barbar in an eternal descent and ascent of a coastal rock face painted between 1992 and 1994.

There is a deliberate serial function to Stephen Bush's art. As Chris McAuliffe points out in the catalogue essay to the above mentioned exhibition, 'his paintings are doubly derivative; they emulate the conventions of the nineteenth century landscape, and they repeat the artist's own oeuvre.'1 Paradoxically, while each painting is seemingly; a replica of the last they are in fact all hand-made and 'created' by the artist himself without mechanical intervention or the aide of digital photography and while they appear to 'come off the press' so to speak, each one is an individual original piece. Each Lure of Paris is painted employing the traditional materials and techniques associated with the artist in his studio, much the same way one of his 19th century colleagues would have worked. The romantic landscape tradition of the 19th century informs his work constantly. The dramatic breaking sunlight along the horizon and the crashing waves hark back to the paintings of Eugene Von Guerard and Nicholas Chevalier, who like Bush would have had numerous variations of the romantic landscape at different stages of completion in their studios at any given time.

Lure of Paris # 18, 2000 was exhibited at the Ian Potter Museum of Art in Work in Progress #5: Stephen Bush in 2003.

1. McAuliffe, C.,'Stephen Bush: Serial Originality' in Stephen Bush: The Lure of Paris, Robert Lindsay Gallery, Melbourne 1994.

LARA NICHOLLS