An iconic American painting. An Australian controversy. Where art and politics, myth-making and modernism intersect, there is Blue Poles by Jackson Pollock. Tom McIlroy uncovers a fascinating story of the painter, the politics and the national scandal that followed.
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About Blue Poles: Jackson Pollock, Gough Whitlam and the Painting That Changed a Nation
In 1973, Blue Poles, the iconic painting by America’s great abstract expressionist Jackson Pollock, was acquired by the Australian government for A$1.4 million. This record-setting price for an artwork sparked a media sensation and controversy both in Australia and the United States.
Blue Poles: Jackson Pollock, Gough Whitlam and the Painting That Changed a Nation details how Jackson Pollock rose to fame, the negotiations that led to the artwork’s move to the National Gallery of Australia (NGA), and the many successes and turbulent turns in between. This story covers Pollock’s entree into an art circle which included renowned patron Peggy Guggenheim, as well as his relationship with artist Lee Krasner, and the larger-than-life accounts that surrounded his artistic practice – including questions around the creation of Blue Poles. It was Gough Whitlam’s commitment to the arts and cultural capital that would see the painting move to another continent, where the media feasted on stories of its cost and brows were raised over its merit. The value of Blue Poles to the Australian art and museum landscape was yet to be foreseen.
Journalist Tom McIlroy tells a compelling account of one of Australia’s most prized paintings, which stirred up many storms from the time of its creation to its placement in the NGA.
About Tom McIlroy
Tom McIlroy is a political correspondent with the Australian Financial Review, reporting from the press gallery at Parliament House. Born and raised in Melbourne, he has reported for a range of newspapers in Australia and overseas, including The Age, Sydney Morning Herald, Ballarat Courier, Canberra Times and Houston Chronicle. A graduate of Melbourne University and RMIT University, McIlroy has been featured in a range of publications including Meanjin and Art Monthly Australasia. Based in Canberra, he writes on national politics, the arts, tax and the economy. Blue Poles is his first book.
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