Sidney Nolan

Carcass

1953, Enamel on board

Dimensions

90.8 x 121.3cms

Object number

75-A-24

In 1952, Nolan was commissioned by Brisbane’s Courier Mail newspaper to travel to Australia’s far north which was then experiencing a severe drought that impacted on vast tracts of pastoral land, destroying livestock. Departing from Darwin, Nolan travelled across northern Australia, overland and by air, producing a series of paintings, drawings and photographs which vividly express the death and devastation he discovered in these drought-stricken regions.

These two works, both painted in 1953 and entitled Carcass, portray the decaying bodies of two cows which are shown twisted and contorted, as if struggling to stay alive. In one work the cow’s distorted and dehydrated body metamorphoses into a landscape that is reminiscent of the paintings Nolan created in Central Australia. Reflecting on his Carcass series, Nolan states: ‘I wanted some indication that life might haunt the vanished bones’ (Lynn, 1979). Evidently, the drought left a deep impression on Nolan. Twenty years later, in 1971, he wrote a poem, also entitled Carcass, which strongly resonates with these two paintings: ‘Screwed up by the sun, held together/ by maggots, dehorned and castrated anyway/ it stands like a rotting ship struck by lightning’. (Lynn, 1979).
Reference:
Lynn, Elwyn. Sidney Nolan: Australia, Bay Books, Sydney & London, 1979, p.116, 118.

In 1952, Nolan was commissioned by Brisbane’s Courier Mail newspaper to travel to Australia’s far north which was then experiencing a severe drought that impacted on vast tracts of pastoral land, destroying livestock. Departing from Darwin, Nolan travelled across northern Australia, overland and by air, producing a series of paintings, drawings and photographs which vividly express the death and devastation he discovered in these drought-stricken regions.

These two works, both painted in 1953 and entitled Carcass, portray the decaying bodies of two cows which are shown twisted and contorted, as if struggling to stay alive. In one work the cow’s distorted and dehydrated body metamorphoses into a landscape that is reminiscent of the paintings Nolan created in Central Australia. Reflecting on his Carcass series, Nolan states: ‘I wanted some indication that life might haunt the vanished bones’ (Lynn, 1979). Evidently, the drought left a deep impression on Nolan. Twenty years later, in 1971, he wrote a poem, also entitled Carcass, which strongly resonates with these two paintings: ‘Screwed up by the sun, held together/ by maggots, dehorned and castrated anyway/ it stands like a rotting ship struck by lightning’. (Lynn, 1979).
Reference:
Lynn, Elwyn. Sidney Nolan: Australia, Bay Books, Sydney & London, 1979, p.116, 118.

Collection description

The Foundation Collection comprises 24 paintings which are the first of several donations made by the artist, Sir Sidney Nolan to the Australian Government from the mid-1970s.

Sidney Nolan (1917-1992) is one of Australia’s most widely acclaimed artists. He is best known for his iconic Kelly paintings which are based on the legendary story of Ned Kelly, Australia’s most renowned bushranger. The Foundation Collection comprises 15 paintings from the artist’s first Kelly series produced during the mid-1940s. It also encompasses paintings from the St Kilda and Burke and Wills series, and inspired by Nolan’s travels around Central Australia. Each of the paintings in this collection reflects the artist’s enduring interest in Australia’s landscape, history, and identity.