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Vale Steven “Paddo” Patterson

February 3, 2026 by Ro Murray Leave a Comment

Vale Steven Patterson

16th December 1966 – 28th December 2025

It is with sadness that we share the passing of Steven Patterson after a six month battle with non- Hodgkin lymphoma.

Steven was a much-loved supporter of Waverley Woollahra Art School and a respected member of the Sydney arts community. While many knew him as the owner of Matisse Derivan paint company, to us he was someone who quietly gave his time, energy, and generosity to ensure the school and its community continued to thrive. As Chair from 1998 to 2003, he helped guide the Centre during a difficult period which played a vital role in securing the schools future.

Steven’s support for the arts extended far beyond our school. He generously donated to many art prizes, Waverley Art Prize being just one of these and he encouraged emerging artists. He championed music both as a member and a participant of the Scots College Pipes and Drums Band, supporting their journey to the Edinburgh Festival.

He was an artist in his own right, his last show at the CBD Gallery October 2024, exhibiting drypoint etchings of his beloved Scotland and Glasgow.

On a personal level, I will miss our conversations and collaborations, especially during lockdown, when we worked closely on new etching ideas and shared many moments of creative connection.

Our thoughts are with his wife Justine, daughter Isobel , son David, and all his friends.Paddo’s kindness, creativity, and quiet dedication will be deeply missed.

Robert Ives

Waverley Woollahra Art School

Here are more memories and tributes to Paddo, see the links https://launcestonartcentre.com.au/blog/vale-paddo

Vale Steven Patterson FRSN

Filed Under: News, Of interest to members., Vale Tagged With: Steven Patterson, Vale Paddo, WaverleyWoollahra Art School

Vale Ruth Faerber

December 6, 2024 by Anthea Boesenberg Leave a Comment

Ruth Faerber at the Art Gallery of New South Wales for her 100th birthday

Ruth Faerber, founding member of Sydney Printmakers and of Primrose Park Paperworks has died at 102 after a richly creative life. She has been an inspiration to generations of Australian printmakers.

Here is an article from ‘The Conversation’ about Ruth. Please click on the links – there is a wealth of information here about Ruth and about the Art World in which she lived.

Ruth Levy was born in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra, on October 9 1922. After a less than pleasant experience at Sydney Girls High with an art teacher she later described as an “absolute whacko”, she became a boarding student at Ravenswood. 

Here, she was inspired by her teacher Gladys Gibbons and introduced to printmaking as an art. When Ruth told her father she wanted to leave school and be an artist, he agreed on the condition that “you’ve got to be able earn your own living”.

She enrolled at Peter Dodd’s Commercial Art School. Dodd’s friends included the radical modernists Frank and Margel Hinder, recently arrived from the United States, giving the students a surprisingly radical art education.

Two years later, as the impact of World War II led to young women being encouraged to take the jobs of departed men, the 17-year-old worked as a junior commercial artist. 

At the Market Printery she was introduced to photogravure printing and made her first experimental etching. 

Ruth continued her studies at East Sydney Technical College. In 1944 she enrolled in Desiderius Orban’s Rowe Street Studio. The refugee Hungarian artist taught that rules were to be broken, that artists must experiment, and to have faith in her creativity. 

These were lessons she never forgot.

Making a life as an artist

In 1946, Ruth married Hans Faerber, a young design engineer who had escaped from Germany in 1938. 

Despite postwar cultural pressures prescribing that women should solely devote themselves to their families, Ruth continued to paint, turning the garage into her studio and running children’s art classes from home. She wanted to learn printmaking but in Sydney this was not possible: the only lithography course was limited to printing apprentices, and only men were eligible to apply.

Ruth Faerber ‘Figures in the night’ 1967, colour lithograph on paper, 45.7 x 68.3 cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, purchased 1967. © Art Gallery of New South Wales, image © Art Gallery of New South Wales

In 1961 Joy Ewart donated her lithography press to create Sydney’s first public access print workshop at the Willoughby Arts Centre. Faerber became one of its most active participants.

In 1963, the year of her first solo exhibition, the family moved to a house on Sydney’s north shore. Her new studio was built into the base of the cliff. To provide safe access without the bother of planning permission, Hans removed the floor of the broom cupboard and placed a ladder down to the studio.

Faerber’s ability to disappear into a cupboard straight after dinner did sometimes disconcert her children and visitors, but it gave her time to make art as she worked through the night.

Continual experiments

By 1968 her prints had been acquired by the National Gallery of Victoria and the Art Gallery of NSW, but she knew she needed to learn more. 

She received a scholarship for New York City’s Pratt Center. In New York, she saw Rauschenberg’s Experiments in Art & Technology and remembered Orban’s dictum to constantly experiment. She started to use spray paint as a medium and to incorporate photographic images in her work. One print includes a newspaper photograph of Leonard Cohen, made after she saw him perform.

Ruth Faerber ‘The victim’ 1988, lithograph, printed in black ink on ivory wove BFK Rives paper, 17 x 31 cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, gift Ruth Faerber 2014, donated through the Australian Government’s Cultural Gifts Program. © Ruth Faerber, image © Art Gallery of New South Wales

Her return to Australia saw continual experiments. She also began to write, becoming the art critic for the Australian Jewish News. Her reviews were characterised by a generosity of spirit, especially noticing artists at the beginning of their careers. Women and printmakers were favoured subjects. 

Ruth Faerber ‘The scrolls’ 1993, sprayed hand-made paper, 105 x 127 cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Gift of H R Investments 1994. © Ruth Faerber, image © Art Gallery of New South Wales

One of the most significant costs for printmakers is the cost of imported handmade paper. In 1980, Faerber was invited to attend the first hand paper-making workshop at the Tasmanian School of Art’s Jabberwock Mill. 

There she realised the possibilities of paper as a medium rather than as a surface. 

She abandoned standard shapes. Her experiments with paper became irregular, then sculptural. Paper began to be made with different materials, including tapioca flour and cold tea. She found if she sprayed a paper sculpture with the kind of aerosol paint designed for cars, she could simulate an impression of aged stone. 

Ruth Faerber ‘Excavation 3’ from the series ‘Signs and symbols’ 1982, cast and moulded paper relief, tinted in earth tones, 118 x 100 cm, Art Gallery of New South Wales, purchased 1982. © Ruth Faerber, image © Art Gallery of New South Wales

While she kept a close eye on the latest technical developments, her best tools of trade were sometimes found in the home. Electric frying pans, food processors and a microwave oven were repurposed to make art. An ironing board with a mesh base was used as a press for making paper. She had a long fascination with archaeological sites, realising how fragile civilisations and human life may be. 

As she became physically frail, Faerber changed her practice towards making digital prints, seeing how far she could stretch the new media to her ends.

Filed Under: Vale, Works on Paper Tagged With: printmaking, Ruth Faerber

Vale Ingrid Johnstone

October 5, 2021 by Anthea Boesenberg Leave a Comment

Ingrid Johnstone, Cache, 2006, Diptych, oil on linen, 168x203cm

Ingrid Johnstone, 9th February 1941 – 31st May 2020

Ingrid was born in Hamburg, Germany and came to Australia in 1962. She studied at East Sydney Tech (National Art School) from 1980 to 1982 Post and achieved Higher Certificates in Painting and Printmaking.

Ingrid completed her Post-Graduate Diploma in Professional Studies at the College of Fine Arts, University of New South Wales in 1983.

Ingrid joined Sydney Printmakers in the early 80’s, and was a member for over a decade, exhibiting with us both locally and internationally.

Her passion for print making was transferred to her students in her teaching. She formed the group Open Bite 1991 to encourage her students at Ku-ring-gai Art Centre to excel in their printmaking endeavours. This group still exists today – https://www.openbiteprintmakers.org/

Ingrid Johnstone’s energy, zest for life and extensive travel is experienced in her art.  

Ingrid Johnstone’s abstract paintings, imbued with gestural energy, capture the essence of colours that tickle our senses – the contours and shapes of the forms are distinctive with a broad spectrum of colours from mouth-watering magenta, pineapple yellow, sublime aquamarine, cobalt and turquoise blues and candied greens.

In her paintings, her great passion, thick, thin, muted textural, smooth, tonal, luscious, dotted, sprayed, and dripped. Above all her work is very painterly.

Ingrid Johnstone has marvelled at the patience of weavers labouring at the looms in Morocco and the cloths in India, Burma and the Iban people in Sarawak. Her imagery was fired by the Dogon tribes in Africa and the textiles in Peru. She structures the repetitive horizontal and vertical weavings of the threads into her own symbolic patterns. She transcends her imagery into her own landscapes.

Ingrid Johnstone, Ship Ahoi! at the Loo, 1987

Filed Under: Vale Tagged With: Ingrid Johnstone, Open Bite Printmakers, paintings, travel imagery, Vale

Vale Robyn Waghorn

October 22, 2020 by Anthea Boesenberg 1 Comment

Robyn Waghorn - No Boundaries IV

Laura Stark writes about the recent passing of Robyn Waghorn.

I have known Robyn for many years, living close by and belonging to a number of printmaking groups, we often shared rides to go to meetings. I admired her sense of purpose, the certainty and consistency with which she approached her work. She was a very private person but also generous and empathetic. Her artist’s statements were brief, bared back to essentials, unwavering in the certainty of her vision. She was always restrained and not given to self promotion.
In 2016 we had a joint exhibition at the Hazelhurst Arts Centre. Ruth Burgess opened the exhibition and in her beautifully expressed opening speech she referred to a comment on Robyn’s work made by Sasha Grishin, that it ‘was noted for a tragic dimension and a sense of loss and absence’.
She then went on to say ‘Using the subject of the Australian bushfires as the origins of her work, Robyn found that while flame is necessary for some species for regrowth, hope is expressed by the white lines and spaces symbolising regeneration and healing, (so much in keeping with Robyn’s own life as a nursing sister).’
Robyn qualified for an Honours degree in printmaking at the SCA. Her studies led her to the use of rich black relief prints. The sense of space these produced found its way into diverse books and images to become the central fugue in her work, tearing apart the conventional view of landscape.

We worked together on a print for the Sydney Printmakers exhibition ‘Collaboration’ in 2005, which, when I last saw it, was hanging in her home. I’m proud to have had the opportunity to have had that close contact with her and that, in that work, our mark making will always be linked.

 Laura Stark Oct. 2020

Robyn Waghorn - No Boundaries II

Robyn Waghorn

Filed Under: Of interest to members., Vale Tagged With: fugue, Laura Stark, Robyn Waghorn, Ruth Burgess, Sasha Grishin, Vale Robyn Waghorn

Vale Bernhardine Mueller by Karen Ball and Denise Scholz Wulfing

February 13, 2020 by Anthea Boesenberg 6 Comments

Vale Bernhardine Mueller

To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)

Bernhardine Mueller, who passed away in December 2019, is fondly remembered by the printmaking community as an inspirational artist, generous teacher, colleague and dear friend. She had the ability to inspire and nurture creativity in others while pursuing her own artistic journey. Each of her students received individual attention and art colleagues knew she was always available as a friendly, supportive listener. Bernhardine was a friend to so many people in numerous printmaking areas.

Bernhardine established the printmaking studio at Ku Ring Gai Art Centre and Lane Cove Centre House and taught at both for many years. As one of her students at KAC in 1990, I(Karen)was immediately enveloped in the warm, friendly atmosphere she created. Many of those students became lifelong friends of Bernhardine. She was very involved in Lane Cove Art Society winning many awards from there and other competitions for her prints, miniatures and artist books.

 Bernhardine also held numerous workshops throughout NSW and Queensland, in particular  Gunnedah and Mitchell School of Arts, Bathurst. These workshops introduced students to printmaking and became the foundation for burgeoning art careers. For many years Bernhardine enjoyed a creative partnership with teachers and secondary school students  in the art studios at Masada College, one of whom was chosen for HSC Art Express exhibition.

As a long term member of Sydney Printmakers, Bernhardine instigated and participated in many exhibitions. She always welcomed and supported new members. Similarly, Bernhardine was a long time, loved member of The Australian Society of Miniature Art. Her dedication to printmaking endured even as she became increasingly unwell. Bernhardine curated an exhibition at Orange Regional Gallery in 2018 with a group of fellow printmaker colleagues connected by their use of Richard Swinburne’s etching presses.  She continued to show her work in Sydney Printmakers and other group shows into 2019. 

Bernhardine was a printmakers’ printmaker. Experimenting with the technique, over printing with multiple blocks, reprinting the same plate many times in different colours, collaging, cropping, hand-colouring, for ever on the search for the best result for that particular print. Her wit, humour and purposeful use of mixed metaphors for dramatic effect were very funny.  This humour and love of words came out in her miniature etchings, playing on words, sayings and gently poking fun at people, society and art.

Bernhardine shared a love of Australian flora and fauna with me (Denise). This constant source of inspiration, in particular a love of birds, meant we exchanged sightings on Brush Turkey behaviour, Currawong antics, Magpie carols and the amazing character of the White Winged Choughs at her beloved son Michael’s place in the Capertee Valley.

It was an honour to know Bernhardine. Her life was full and creative but she always had time for her many friends. She seemed to know when someone needed encouragement or some words of wisdom.  We will miss her but her light will shine on through all those she inspired.

Filed Under: Of interest to members., Vale Tagged With: Australian Society of Miniature Art, Bernhardine Mueller, Denise Should Wulfing, inspirational artist and teacher, Karen Ball, Vale

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