David Shrigley’s iconic bronze sculpture, Really Good, 2016, which takes the form of a seven-metre-high ‘thumbs up’, has been generously acquired for the NGV Collection by the Felton Be
8 December 2023: A larger-than-life bronze of a young woman by British artist Thomas J Price and a mirror-polished statue of a young man by art duo Elmgreen & Dragset…
This is a style of frame that appears in the Thallon ledger many times. It was a particular favourite of Frederick McCubbin.
The frame is one of a matching pair on watercolours by this artist in the collection. The original matts have been replaced with museum mount board.
The maker is identified by an ink stencil, located centre-bottom reverse: J & W VOKINS MAKERS 14 GREAT PORTLAND ST.
This is the only frame by Lillie Williamson (Mrs. Tom Roberts) identified in the collection.
The frame is a reworking of the Louis XV style and represents a type of frame which was economically produced but ornate in appearance.
Though the frame no longer carries an identifying label, it is catalogued here as by John Thallon.
The frame is one of three original framings of works by the artist in the collection. It was returned to the painting in 1985 after being located in storage.
The frame is interesting on a number of levels. The walking stick presumably belonged to the sitter and is here attached as an artefact of remembrance.
The maker is identified by a stencil directly onto the wood on the reverse of the frame, centre bottom, an unusual means of identification by Thallon.
The frame fits stylistically with a group characterised by this reverse profile form, the most notable being the frame on Frederick McCubbin’s Winter Evening, (61-2) also by Thallo
A variant on the popular Louis XV revival style, this time characterised by the use of net to texture the inner scotia and by elaborate detailing of the slip.
One of the frames made for Bernard Hall by the Thallon company in its later years, under the direction of Ted Burman and using the Thallon label.
This is the original frame for the painting. Despite its simple and almost austere aesthetic, it was replaced in favour of a Whistlerian model, most likely by J. S.