Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

DOMINION ART

AN AMBITIOUS PROJECT CLEARING HOUSE HI LONDON. No more “mute, inglorious Miltona” need drag out disappointed live.?, if the project launched in England by an enthusiastic group of men and women, with Lord Howard de Walden at their head, comes to fruition. Mr Peter Gawthorne, author and 1 actor, who has arrived in Melbourne • is a member of the committee of the : movement and its accredited r: presen- j tative in Australia. Its name iy the I British Empire Academy, and it:- function is to promote, aid and unite the arts throughout the Empire, Mr Gaw r thorne explained its aims to a representative of the Melbourne “Herald.” How It Originated. “It is an ambitious project,” he said, “which had its origin in the sense of the difficulties it was felt by lay before capable men and women in the Dominions in getting a hearing for their worls in London. “Adversity and disappointment may be good for the artist so long as the “hope deferred” docs not make the heart too sick. Grub Street is a picturesque halting place, but a wretched permanent address. “The mon who first conceived the idea of founding a clearing house for the arts, as it were, were sensible of the necessity for two things. The first was the great benefit art generally would receive by an exchange of thought and personality between the Dominions. Pictures, handicrafts, music, literature and their creators from every part of the Empire would become better known. The second was the helping over the stony qjlaccs of promising men and women, whatever their mode of artistic self-expression.

Florence Austral’s Hardship. “Think of the failure that was almost the portion of your great singer, Florence Austral, for example. She was, after repeated disappointments on the point of sailing for Australia when Chance brought her the opportunity she had sought for vainly, and she became known in a night as the world’s greatest Wagnerian singer.” “I Jiave been charged,” Mr Gawthorne explained, “with initiating the formation of branches of the Academy in each Australian State. Committees will be formed in large country centres, and any promising work may be submitted to these. “A ploughboy poet need no longer despair of having his verses read and judged. The Academy in England will have ample funds to ensure that no talent will go without judgment, £3,000,000 Scheme. , “The sum of £3,000,000 is being sought in England, and it is intended to build near the Houses of Parliament on a site already acquired, a noble building which will contain picture galleries, a theatre and a cinema, besides concert rooms and ordinary club rooms. It will be used as a rendezvous for all Dominion visitors. “Temporary premises have already been acquired, and the rent of these for the next four years has been paid by Lord Howard de Walden, our president, out of his own pocket. “One useful result is expected to accrue from the creation of the Academy. At a recent Albert Hall concert, given entirely by Dominion artists, it was remarked that only one item on the programme was other than foreign music, and the exception was a Maori song, singularly enough the most popular of all. Songs native to the Dominions arc to be specially encouraged. Help Playrights, Too,

“It is natural for theatre managers in the Dominions to prefer plays that have won success in England and America, passing by local drama and comedy. Yet it has happened that when chances have been taken results have justified them. “We are certain that much hidden talent lies in the Dominions in the way of play-writing, though authors can neither get a chance in their own country nor in England, except fortune be very kind. At least a hearing will be given them by the Academy. “Such, briefly, is what we are out to do. We will encourage co-operation between artists and carer for the Dorninion outlook, giving artists of all kinds a central home in London.”

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19270613.2.78

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 19865, 13 June 1927, Page 10

Word Count
665

DOMINION ART Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 19865, 13 June 1927, Page 10

DOMINION ART Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 19865, 13 June 1927, Page 10