Peter Booth exhibition opens at TarraWarra Museum of Art

AAR-TWMA-Peter-Booth-Painting-2022Considered by many to be one of the most significant contemporary artists working in Australia today, TarraWarra Museum of Art presents a survey exhibition of the work of artist Peter Booth.

With a remarkable career spanning several decades, Melbourne-based Booth is a unique voice in Australian painting. This new survey of paintings and works on paper will be the first major public gallery exhibition of Booth’s work since the NGV retrospective in 2003 and will feature a number of the artist’s most significant works from the 1970s to 1990s, alongside important recent works from the past two decades.

Curated by TarraWarra’s Anthony Fitzpatrick, the exhibition will be presented thematically, honing in on and highlighting particular motifs, subjects and moods which have become hallmarks of Booth’s expansive oeuvre: stillness and turbulence; alterity and alienation; mutation and hybridity; the absurd and the grotesque; the road and the ruin; and the despoilation and the resilience of nature.

“This exhibition will reveal Booth’s extraordinary capacity to transmute his intensely personal perceptions of the mysteries and forces of nature, and the folly and hubris of human endeavours, into exceptional and deeply-compelling paintings and drawings,” said Mr Fitzpatrick.

A small group of abstract paintings from the mid-1970s at the start of the exhibition provide a prelude to an important series of gestural paintings which mark the beginning of the artist’s journey into a neo-expressionist figurative style.

The exhibition progresses through Booth’s vivid imaginings of an apocalyptic world characterised by grotesque, unsettling, and at times absurd scenes of human and hybrid figures in varying states of apprehension, aggression and conflict.

These works will be accompanied by a small selection of prints by William Blake, James Ensor, Francisco Goya, and Samuel Palmer, visionary artists who have been important touchstones for Booth and with whom he shares a number of affinities.

This survey will also bring together important works from the past three decades to convey humanity’s often fraught and ambiguous relationship to the natural world.

“Initially Booth’s highly visceral paintings of fiery, turbulent environments were the stage for confronting and, at times, violent human encounters,” said Mr Fitzpatrick. “Since the 1990s, many of the scenes he has painted have become increasingly depopulated, implicating the viewer who is called to contemplate and navigate their own subjective relationship to these vivid landscapes.”

“Most recently, the artist has returned to the apocalyptic imagery that characterised his first forays into figuration, with large-scale paintings of desolate and devastated scenes of a world in a cataclysmic state of collapse.”

“This is art for a time of ecological and existential crisis in which anthropogenic impacts have driven the planet, and its intricate web of ecosystems, to the brink of utter catastrophe,” said Mr Fitzpatrick.

The exhibition will be generously supported by The Balnaves Foundation. “The Balnaves Foundation is pleased to continue its support for TarraWarra Museum of Art to deliver new major exhibitions by Australian artists,” said Hamish Balnaves, Chief Executive Officer and Trustee of The Balnaves Foundation.

“The Foundation is a proud partner in these important endeavours, providing vital opportunities for Australian artists to be showcased, whilst providing outstanding arts experiences to a broad range of audiences.”


Peter Booth
Tarrawarra Museum of Art, 313 Healesville-Yarra Glen Road, Healesville
Exhibition continues to 13 March 2023
Entry fees apply

For more information, visit: www.twma.com.au for details.

Image: Peter Booth, Painting 2022, oil on canvas, 188.5 x 274.8 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery, Brisbane © Peter Booth