The untold story of a major Australian artist. Regarded in his day as an
important Australian impressionist painter, A.H. Fullwood (1863-1930)
was also the most widely viewed British-Australian artist of the
Heidelberg era. Fullwood's illustrations for the popular Picturesque
Atlas of Australasia and the Bulletin, as well as leading Australian
and English newspapers, helped shape how settler-colonial Australia was
seen both here and around the world. Meanwhile his paintings were as
celebrated as those of his good friends Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton.
So why is Fullwood so little known today? In this pioneering, richly
illustrated biography, Gary Werskey brings Fullwood and his
extraordinary career as an illustrator, painter, and war artist back to
life, while casting a new light on the most fabled era in the history of
Australian art.