Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Canberra Times
The Canberra Times
National
Megan Doherty

Cressida reaches a crescendo as exhibition closes soon

Some of the many thousands of people who have taken in the Cressida Campbell exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia over spring and summer. Picture by Elesa Kurtz

Artist Cressida Campbell is no social media user. Her niece once set her up an Instagram account and Campbell reckons the only photographs she's posted were ones she took by accident - one of a comb and another of her shoes - when she was a bit tipsy.

"Well, a better would is probably 'drunk'," she said. Droll as ever.

And then she adds archly: "To my amazement, the posts got a few 'likes'. And I thought, 'Jesus, if that's what people are liking, they must be desperate'."

Social media is, nevertheless, showing Campbell a lot of love at the moment as visitors to her eponymous exhibition at the National Gallery of Australia post their appreciation, for her and her work.

Even more so, now, as the exhibition is entering its final days, finishing in Canberra on Sunday, February 19.

In the wake of the exhibition, which opened in spring, Campbell, who says she's "hopeless on the internet", lies in bed at night while her husband Warren Macris scrolls through countless posts with the hashtag #cressidacampbell, from people who've been to see her work.

"He reads out comments people have made and, I must say, they've been incredible," she said.

"I have to stop him from reading out too many because I said I'd have to enlarge the hallway."

To get your head through?

"Yeah," she said, with that marvellous chuckle.

Cressida Campbell sitting amongst her works in the National Gallery of Australia. Picture by Greg Nagel

It's a measure of Campbell's down-to-earth nature that she's making jokes about the success of the exhibition, obviously delighting in it but never boasting about it.

In all seriousness, though, she says the reaction of people who've made the effort to see the exhibition do mean a lot.

"They say really smart things. I respect what they say. And I'm just very touched and flattered," she said.

Cressida Campbell, Margaret Olley interior, 1992, Private collection Cressida Campbell

Campbell, 62, says National Gallery director Dr Nick Mitzevich took a leap of faith by staging the exhibition of her work over spring and summer, in the gallery's traditional blockbuster spot, putting a living Australian female artist in the spotlight rather than a long-gone overseas master.

And the fact visitors to the exhibition have reacted with such joy and positivity to it has made Campbell feel very happy.

"It just feels wonderful. I feel honored, put it that way, and I couldn't have asked for me," she said.

"People have been so great about it."

Cressida Campbell, Eucalypt forest, 2000, Private collection, image courtesy Warren Macris Cressida Campbell

The gallery won't release visitor numbers until the exhibition has finished, but Dr Mitzevich suggests the attendances should be good.

''We're honoured to work with Cressida Campbell to present this exhibition at the National Gallery, which has resulted in our busiest summer in three years," he said.

"A lot of our visitors have commented on the extraordinary beauty that Cressida captures from the simplest things around her home and garden, and her extraordinary technical prowess.

"Cressida Campbell is one of the most important artists living and working today and everyone leaves the exhibition ready to share their experience with friends, family and colleagues."

Cressida Campbell, Nasturtiums, 2002, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Gift of Margaret Olley 2006, image courtesy the Art Gallery of New South Wales

Featuring more than 140 of Campbell's woodcut prints and woodblock paintings, the exhibition covers her art from childhood to the present, her keen eye always elevating the ordinary to something extraordinary and beautiful.

"What's been really incredible to me about this show is how it's connected with people," she said.

"It's something about my work that moves people. All kinds of people. I think that's been the most moving thing for me."

Examples of Cressida Campbell's work as a child are included in the exhibition. Picture supplied

Campbell, too, recognises her own exhibition as something rare. Many of the works were borrowed from private collections and have not been on display for decades. Her husband Warren has been busy photographing them because Campbell is as excited as anyone else to see them.

"Pictures I won't see again, unless they come up for auction," she said.

Cressida Campbell, Self portrait, 1988, private collection, Sydney Cressida Campbell

And she and Warren also had a film made of the exhibition, for their own record.

"As you can imagine, it's not every day of the week this will happen," she said.

But while she's enjoyed visiting Canberra and now has some favourite restaurants (Italian and Sons, Rebel Rebel and Iori) and the National Arboretum is next on her to-do list, Campbell says she hasn't spent too much time at the exhibition.

When your life's work is presented to you, sometimes it can be too much for such a meticulous artist.

"I actually haven't been in there much on my own. The odd person suggests I should go in and have a quiet look. But for me there's an element of horror going in there. It's wonderful on the one hand, but you see all the faults," she said.

Cressida Campbell at the launch of the exhibition in September. Picture by Keegan Carroll

"Because it's over many years, you see the good and the bad. Meaning there's aspects to earlier work that has good aspects and different aspects and later work that has good aspects, just like us, as we're growing older, you don't blunder in quite as much as when you're older but at the same time you're not quite as lively as you might have been."

The exhibition has been a success in other ways. Its illustrated catalogue, created in collaboration with the artist, has been shortlisted for the 2023 Indie Book Awards, with the winners to be announced in March.

Cressida Campbell was also a Know My Name project, an initiative by the National Gallery to deliberately increase the representation of female artists.

And there's no doubt many more people now do know her name. Cressida Campbell's paintings, the full breadth, have become familiar and recognisable.

Campbell brushes off the recognition and says a lot of people brought the exhibition to life. It took effort, just like her paintings.

"Anything good usually does take a lot of work," she said.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.