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Anne Judell (born 1942) is an Australian artist and winner of the 2011 Dobell Prize for drawing. Judell was born in Melbourne in 1942, and studied at RMIT University. She moved to Sydney in 1977 and then to the New South Wales southern highlands in 1992. In 1967 Judell married Fred Cress, a British migrant who had come to Australia in 1962. Cress went on to be a successful artist, though the couple separated after Cress's highest achievement, winning the 1988 Archibald Prize. The work of Judell was the subject of a 2002 exhibition at Campbelltown Arts Centre.〔 A 2007 drawing executed in gesso and charcoal on Hahnemühle paper, ''First light'', was selected for inclusion in the Blake Prize exhibition. In 2011, after having been a finalist nine times, she won the Dobell Prize for a triptych, ''Breath'', done in pastel on paper. Judge of the competition, Guy Warren, observed: "In a world of clashes and chaos this work speaks of something different. With dense layers and subtle surfaces it talks of the mystery of growth, of essences and fragility, of quiet contemplation. It is like a thought once understood and lost, which one tries to grasp again."〔 A distinctive feature of Judell's method is the time taken to create a drawing, with individual pieces sometimes taking several years. She was reported saying that ''Breath'' was unusual in being completed in one year.〔 Judell's 2011 prize-winning work is held by the Art Gallery of New South Wales,〔〔Contemporary Australian Drawing 20 Years of the Dobell Prize for Drawing written by Helen Campbell, Hendrik Kolenberg, Anne Ryan Art Gallery of NSW | ISBN 9781741740868〕 the National Gallery of Australia, and the National Gallery of Victoria. Judell is represented in Melbourne by () Gallery. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Anne Judell」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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