After
the successful 1974 etching exhibition at Sydney's Bloomfield Galleries,
the continuing rise in prices and increasing scarcity of the originals
made it clear that many art enthusiasts wanted etchings for their
collections, but could not afford them. The demand was such that
after consultation with Jane Lindsay, Lin Bloomfield decided to
publish three folios of limited edition facsimile reproductions
of the etchings at an affordable price.
The Norman Lindsay Facsimile Etchings were launched with considerable
publicity on 30 November 1974 at Bloomfield Galleries. The metal
plates which had been cancelled by Jane Lindsay and all the printing
materials (subsequently destroyed) were also displayed. Each facsimile
was hung next to the original etchings to demonstrate the quality
of the facsimile.
The first set of facsimile etchings was presented in three folios
which included:
Folio 1 ($100): Enter the Magicians, The Innocents, Decoy, Argument
Folio 2 ($50): The Bauble, Bargains, Dryad, The Butterfly
Folio 3 ($100): Self Portrait, C Sharp Minor Quartet, Life
in the Temple
This exhibition proved that in some quarters censorship was
still flourishing. Full page advertisements featuring Self Portrait
were placed with the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian
newspapers. The Australian accepted and published the advertisement
without fuss. The Sydney Morning Herald, after examining
a small, clear reproduction of Self Portrait also accepted.
Delivery of the full-size photograph, however, sparked a series
of emergency meetings ascending the management ladder until a top
level directive not to publish was issued. By then it was too late
to photograph another image for the advertisement so the page ran
on 30 November 1974, p.14, as a blank with the words This etching
was banned in 1930. Norman Lindsay is still a controversial figure
in 1974.
Trying to find out the reasoning behind the ban was not easy. As
the Bulletin (14 December 1974, p.20) reported under the
cheeky heading 'All The Nudes fit to Print', Mrs Bloomfield
kept asking people at the Herald what exactly the management
objected to in the etching: could they point, perhaps, to any
particular feature ...? She got answers which kept mentioning "segments
of our society" and "sections of our readership which,
unlike the readers of other papers, tend to write in to us
with their objections". She surmised, however, that it
was the main male nude figure which did not appeal.
In November 1994 Bloomfield Galleries held a commemorative exhibition
of the forty Norman Lindsay facsimile etchings, published over twenty
years, together with seven remaining cancelled plates from the first
editions. Desire was a special release for this exhibition.
In 1998 unpublished etchings were released for the first time as
facsimile etchings. All the unpublished etchings are rare and the
majority are exceedingly rare. In most instances the only known
prints are in the Mitchell Library folios.
2005 saw the first release of
etchings where the originals had only previously been available
in limited edition books and therefore extremely rare. Columbine
from the 1918 Colombine and Your Fate from the
1927 The Etchings of Norman Lindsay were released as facsimile
etchings in specially printed folios, sold together, similar to
the first release of facsimile etchings in 1974.
April 2006 saw the release of Atlantis,
the 100th Norman Lindsay Facsimile Etching published by Odana Editions
and to commemorate this significant event, an exhibition was held
at Bloomfield Galleries exhibiting all one hundred Norman Lindsay
Facsimile Etchings published from 1974 to 2006. |