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Time and Tide
1945 — 1946
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The paintings in Time and Tide — The Story in Pictures of Roebuck Bay N.W Australia Elizabeth Durack's first exhibition, were produced over an eight month period (October 1945—May 1946) when the artist was based in Broome, Western Australia. In some 100 works she created paintings from direct observation, imagination and research that reflect the pearling town's past and present. |
- Legend
- 1946
- oil on masonite
- 180 x 70 cm (est)
- exhibited: Museum and Art Gallery of Western Australia (1946); the Athenaeum, Melbourne (1946); David Jones Gallery, Sydney (1947)
- location unknown
- Legend is the first of 93 paintings in Time and Tide. And it is #1 of four historic panels in the show.
The allusion is to Aboriginal legend that told of the wanderings of huge bird-like creatures that once lived along the coast as evidenced by the tracks they left behind; most of them visible only at low tide. The outside — or the modern — world was not aware of the tracks until sighted and described by a group of Girl Guides on an excursion to Gantheaume Point, Broome, in 1935. Shortly after, the tracks were recognised as dinosaur footprints. It was not, however, until the 1990s that serious scientific work — initiated by Broome resident Paul Foulkes — was conducted and a number of different dinosaurs and many 100s of their footprints identified.
Elizabeth Durack spent Christmas 1945 at the Gantheaume Point lighthouse with her two children. Sighting the footprints at that time inspired this painting — and the other three works in the series. It is significant that the first painting in Durack's first exhibition should be a work depicting Australia's far past.
A black and white photograph, located among the archives in 2009, seems to be the only surviving record of this work.