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Antonio Dattilo Rubbo

Italian painter (1870–1955) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antonio Dattilo Rubbo
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Antonio Salvatore Dattilo Rubbo (Napoli 21 June 1870 – Sydney 1 June 1955) was an Italian-born artist and art teacher active in Australia from 1897.[1]

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Early life

Rubbo, or Dattilo-Rubbo, was born in Naples in 1870, and spent his early childhood in the Neapolitan municipality of Frattamaggiore.[2] He studied painting under Domenico Morelli and Filippo Palizzi and after studying at Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Naples, earnt a Diploma of Professor of Drawing in Public Institutions.[3]

Rubbo emigrated to Australia,[4]arriving in Sydney in 1897.

From 1898 Rubbo taught in Sydney schools including St. Joseph's College, Hunters Hill, Kambala School, The Scots College, Newington College and Homebush Grammar School.[1]

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Career

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Dattilo Rubbo was not a great artist – "muddy genre portraits of very wrinkled old Tuscan peasants were his strong suit," according to critic Robert Hughes – but he was an inspiring art teacher, responsible for introducing a whole generation of Australian painters to modernism through his art school (opened in 1898) and his classes at the Royal Art Society of New South Wales. He became a major competitor of Julian Ashton's art school movement.[5]

In contrast to nearly all other art teachers in Australia at the time, he was not a reactionary, and encouraged his students to experiment with styles as radically different from his own as Post-Impressionism and Cubism.

He was a flamboyant character who believed in championing his students to the hilt; indeed, in 1916 he challenged a committee member of the Royal Art Society to a duel because he had refused to hang a post-impressionist landscape by his pupil Roland Wakelin.[6] Other students included Norah Simpson,[7] Frank Hinder, Grace Cossington Smith (whom Dattilo Rubbo referred to affectionately as 'Mrs Van Gogh'), Donald Friend ("Aha Donaldo, always the barocco; rub it out, boy, rub it out!"), Roy De Maistre, war artist Roy Hodgkinson, Archibald Prize winner Arthur Murch, social realist Roy Dalgarno, Tom Bass,[1] and very probably Muriel Binney.[8]

In 1924 he helped to found Manly Art Gallery and Historical Collection which holds over one hundred and thirty of his works, with a room in the gallery named in his honour in 1940.[1][9]

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Official Portrait of John Curtin by Antonio Dattilo Rubbo, 1947

In 1947 Dattilo Rubbo was commissioned to paint the official (posthumous) portrait of Australian Prime Minister, John Curtin.[3]

He founded the Dante Aligheri Art and Literary Society, and in 1954 became a life member of the Society of Artists.[5] When he retired, one of his teaching staff, Giuseppe Fontanelli Bissietta, known as a member of the Six Directions group, took over his "ADR" school in "Century House", 70 Pitt Street, Sydney.[10]

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Honours

In 1922, the Royal Art Society appointed their first eight Fellows, among them Dattilo-Rubbo, William Lister Lister, Charles Bryant, J. S. Watkins, Lawson Balfour, James R. Jackson, Sir John Langstaff and Margaret Preston.[9]

A decade later in 1932, Rubbo was honoured with the title Cavaliere of the Order of the Crown of Italy.[3]

He donated to the Municipality of Frattamaggiore six of his works, including a self-portrait, on the occasion of the National Painting Exhibition of 1955. He also contributed AUD£50 for the purchase of classically inspired paintings for a municipal art gallery to be established. In recognition of his generosity, the Municipality awarded him honorary citizenship and a gold medal, which arrived after his death.[11]

See also

References

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