Sidney Nolan

Policeman in wombat hole

1946, Enamel on composition board

Dimensions

91.8 x 122.3cms

Object number

75-A-15

This painting is one of Nolan’s most whimsical works from the Stringybark Creek series. Of the four policemen involved in the Kelly gang’s ambush at Stringybark Creek, Constable Thomas McIntyre was the only one who escaped alive. After fleeing the Kelly gang on Sergeant Kennedy’s horse, McIntyre found refuge in a wombat hole where he hid until dark. The policeman is depicted upside down with his head in the sand, his arms and legs protruding from the hole. The displaced wombat and a scurrying lizard flank the constable, and a magpie perches on the tip of his rifle. In his hand he holds a handwritten note: ‘Ned Kelly and others stuck us up today, when we were disarmed. Lonigan and Scanlon shot. I am hiding in a wombat hole until dusk’.

This painting is one of Nolan’s most whimsical works from the Stringybark Creek series. Of the four policemen involved in the Kelly gang’s ambush at Stringybark Creek, Constable Thomas McIntyre was the only one who escaped alive. After fleeing the Kelly gang on Sergeant Kennedy’s horse, McIntyre found refuge in a wombat hole where he hid until dark. The policeman is depicted upside down with his head in the sand, his arms and legs protruding from the hole. The displaced wombat and a scurrying lizard flank the constable, and a magpie perches on the tip of his rifle. In his hand he holds a handwritten note: ‘Ned Kelly and others stuck us up today, when we were disarmed. Lonigan and Scanlon shot. I am hiding in a wombat hole until dusk’.

Series description

The Ned Kelly paintings are Nolan’s most celebrated series, and they established his reputation as one of Australia’s most prominent artists. Created between 1945 and 1947, the larger series includes approximately 45 works, several of which share the same title. They focus on the story of Ned Kelly, Australia’s most renowned bushranger who was executed by hanging in Victoria in 1880. Whether Kelly was a hero or villain will continue to be debated but he has nonetheless become a significant figure in Australian folklore. Nolan was interested in the enduring power of the Kelly myth, and in his paintings Kelly is cast in various guises – as a loyal family member or an armed criminal – thus emphasising his human and individual traits.

Nolan, like Kelly, was also the son of Irish immigrants, and it has been suggested that he empathised with Kelly’s anti-establishment stand, demonstrated by his rejection of formal art training and the bohemian lifestyle he led as he painted this series at Heide. Nolan admits that there is an autobiographical element to the Kelly paintings. He states: ‘Really the Kelly paintings are secretly about myself… From 1945 to 1947 there were emotional and complicated events in my own life. It’s an inner history of my own emotions…’. (Lynn & Semler, 1989).

Reference:

Lynn, Elwyn and Bruce Semler, Sidney Nolan’s Ned Kelly: Paintings and drawings from the collection of the Australian National Gallery, rev. ed., National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1989, p.8.

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.