Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Revel Cooper

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Australian

Name
  
Revel Cooper

Patron(s)
  
Florence Rutter


Movement
  
Carrolup

Known for
  
Painting

Role
  
Artist

Revel Cooper image2findagravecomphotos250photos201287874

Full Name
  
Revel Ronald Cooper

Died
  
1983, Melbourne, Australia

Noelene white memories of revel cooper at carrolup


Revel Ronald Cooper (c. 1934 – 1983) was an Indigenous Australian artist.

Contents

Revel Cooper httpsyt3ggphtcomMakGN83YFD8AAAAAAAAAAIAAA

Paintings from the Heart


Early life

Revel Cooper Paintings Revel Ronald Cooper Australian Art Auction Records

Cooper was born in Katanning, Western Australia in the mid-1930s and as a ward of the state was placed at Carrolup Native Settlement.

Children of Carrolup

Revel Cooper Revel Ronald Cooper List All Works

From the 1940s children at the Carrolup school were given specialised art training. Cooper was one of a number of children collectively referred to as the Children of Carrolup. During the late 1940s artwork created by the Carrolup children was exhibited in the Western Australian capital Perth and overseas in India. Through the intervention of English woman Florence Rutter, the paintings were exhibited in New Zealand and in Europe. In 1952 his work appeared in Mary Durack's book Child Artists of the Australian Bush.

Later art

Revel Cooper Artworks of Revel Cooper

Unlike many of the child artists of Carrolup, Cooper continued painting into adulthood. After leaving school he was briefly engaged as a commercial artist in Perth before moving back to Carrolup to work as a farm worker.

Revel Cooper Paintings Revel Ronald Cooper Australian Art Auction Records

In 1952 Cooper was sentenced to four years jail for manslaughter, the first of a string of jail terms.

In the mid 1950s he had a brief stint in Victoria working for Bill Onus' Aboriginal souvenir business and is considered to have influenced the artistic style of Bill's son, Lin Onus.

During the 1960s with assistance from the Victorian Aborigines Advancement League Cooper was a frequent exhibitor in Victorian galleries. His use of landscapes had by this stage become his signature style.

During a stint in Fremantle Prison in 1976 he was the illustrator of Mary Durack's Yagan of the Bibbulmun, a work of juvenile fiction. While at Fremantle he also contributed a work depicting the Stations of the Cross for a church in Mount Barker. He served as a teacher for a group of artists at Fremantle Prison including Goldie Kelly and Swag Taylor.

For a time he also worked as chauffeur to the Director of Aboriginal Welfare in Melbourne.

Death and legacy

He died early 1983 after being attacked with a blunt instrument. His body was discovered in December 1985 and he was buried in January 1987.

Works of Cooper are included in a number of collections, including the Holmes à Court Collection, the Fremantle Prison collection and the Berndt Museum of Anthropology collection.

References

Revel Cooper Wikipedia


Similar Topics