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Details

Latitude
51.2715316
Longitude
-0.341452351
Start Date
1833-01-01
End Date
1917-01-01

Description

Sources

ID
tb9534

Extended Data

Birth Place
Surrey, England, UK
Biography
painter and professional photographer, was born in Surrey, England. He was taught to paint and draw by his father, Henry Short , and by attending classes at the Royal Academy School of Design in Somerset House, London. In 1852, aged eighteen, he came to Melbourne with his family in the Bangalore . In July 1856 W.W. Short exhibited his moving canvas Crimean War panorama, The Siege of Sebastopol , at Melbourne’s old Salle de Valentino, now renamed the Victoria Promenade. He first showed oil paintings in Melbourne the same year. At the Victorian Exhibition of Art, he showed Sunset View from Studley Park, Collingwood in the Distance , View of Flemington from Royal Park, with Cattle Grazing and Sundown. View Taken from Studley Park, with Richmond in the Distance (NLA). All were for sale. At this time he was still living at his parents’ home in Madeline Street, North Melbourne. In 1857 R.F. Norton offered Short’s Studley Punt on the Yarra for sale at the Geelong Mechanics Institute Exhibition, and that same year William himself showed three landscapes with the Society of Fine Arts in Melbourne. His too were for sale, the most expensive being Dight’s Mill (Royal Historical Society of Victoria) at £50. Reviews were mixed. The Age encouragingly wrote: That persevering young artist, Mr. W.W. Short, has as usual several oil pictures representing chiefly scenes on the Yarra Yarra beyond which the artist does not seem to rove. Every one of these exhibited is a great improvement upon any former effort, both as regards coloring and general treatment; but his pictures still have too much of the teaboardy aspect, and sadly want boldness of touch and variety of color. 'Christopher Sly’ ( James Neild ) of the Examiner called Sketch, near St. Kilda : 'atrocious rubbish … which, by the way, is not a sketch near St. Kilda, but is a very sorry attempt to paint the falls at Dight’s Mill and in which the rocks are represented as titanic carious teeth’. None of the paintings sold. All reappeared in the window of Joseph Wilkie’s art supplies and music emporium in Collins Street in 1859. Meanwhile Short had painted a 'Grand Moving Panorama of the Indian War’, which he exhibited in July 1858 'at the Assembly Rooms adjoining M’Cowan’s City Hotel, for a few evenings only, prior to its departure for the diggings’. In June 1860 he applied, unsuccessfully, for the position of artist on the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition (whose leaders were subsequently commemorated in a painting by his father). He was living at 158 Brunswick Street in Collingwood or Fitzroy in 1861, the year he showed two oils in the Victorian Exhibition of Fine Arts, The Yarra Bend from Studley Park and Distant View of the Lower Wannon Falls . The Age called the former 'a capital painting’, but the Argus commented: 'this gentleman is too fond of green and bronze. His pictures have a glare and flashiness about them which, if he would correct, he would probably secure more easily the effect he is perpetually seeking after’. The Examiner was even more severe: Mr. W. Short is eminently painstaking but he is wrong – wrong in colour, wrong in effect, wrong in form. His pictures are very hard, very shiny, very brown, very like each other. If you half shut your eyes, and look at one after the other, you can hardly see any difference between them, so absolute is their mannerism … And yet his pictures are anything but carelessly painted, they are almost painfully elaborated, but they are elaborated in the wrong way. He makes great progress in a mistaken direction. Short showed two oil paintings (possibly the same ones) at that year’s Victorian Exhibition held in preparation for the 1862 London International Exhibition. The 1861 view of the Yarra River signed 'William Short Jnr’ exhibited by Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne in 1984 is probably his Yarra Bend painting. He turned to raffling his paintings in art unions to supplement his income and wrote, as his father was to do three years later, to Sir Henry Barkly seeking subscriptions. The Governor took two tickets in his October 1860 art union of two oil paintings, The Barrabool Hills, Geelong and The Yan Yean Reservoir (75 tickets at a guinea each). In February 1862 Barkly purchased two tickets for the 'large oil painting of the Yarra Bend taken from Studley Park in the late exhibition’ and in October took, as usual, two tickets (specifying that he wanted numbers 47 and 48) for a large oil of 'the Botanical Gardens, with a view of Melbourne’ (100 tickets at a guinea). William was suitably grateful. Yet art unions even with vice-regal patronage did not provide much of a living. In 1863 William opened a photographic studio at 41 Collins Street West, Melbourne and the following year was calling himself 'artist in colors [and] photographic artist’. He exhibited only photographs at the 1866 Melbourne Intercolonial Exhibition, notably photographic portraits of children produced by an invention he had patented which, he claimed, dramatically reduced exposure time. 'Babies photographed in half a second by W. Short’s patent Electric Process’ was still appearing on the back of his cartes-de-visites in 1877. Claiming long experience as an artist in drawing and painting as well as photography and offering both cartes-de-visites and vignettes, Short announced the opening of his new photographic studio at 37 Collins Street East in May 1867, having moved from 107 Elizabeth Street – Henry James 's former rooms. In 1870 he was a founding member of the Victorian Academy of Arts and is said to have exhibited Picnic Point, Looking towards Brighton Beach at the academy’s second exhibition in 1872 (catalogue unlocated). Although he was the proprietor of the Melbourne & Berlin Photographic Company at 12 Bourke Street East, Melbourne in 1877-84, Short seems to have spent part of the time at least at Bendigo. It was from an address in Pall Mall, Sandhurst (Bendigo) that an offended Short wrote to the newly formed Victorian Artists’ Society in April 1880 indignantly declining (in the light of his former vice-regal patronage) the committee’s offer to present him to Governor Lock, adding the postscript: 'Be kind enough to erase my name as member of your society’. In the early 1870s Short’s whereabouts are obscured by the appearance of a namesake artist, possibly one of the Short Brothers . He often signed himself 'William Short junior’ and was listed this way when another William Short (who correspondingly called himself William Short senior in 1871-73), a painter of Bond Street, East Collingwood, appeared in the Melbourne Directory from 1870 to 1873. Any relationship to this older William Short has yet to be determined, but W.W. Short may have been his nephew. Years later, when William’s son William Henry Short began painting and exhibiting professionally the older artist had disappeared and W.W. Short then seems to have called himself 'William Short senior’. Numerous landscape paintings of the 1880s (mainly forest views) are signed this way. The more formulaic examples have the 'teaboardy’ qualities earlier complained of and appear compatible with Short’s youthful views, but the oeuvre of the three William Shorts still needs to be untangled. There is, however, no questioning the identity of the William Short who exhibited nearly twenty Victorian landscapes at Stevens’s Art Gallery, Elizabeth Street, Melbourne, in 1898 and was reported as 'a pioneer painter, having arrived in the colony in 1852’. They included 'a bush track at Woodend, two moonlight effects, a view of the Yarra at Heidelberg, where the river is seen as its best’ and, 'the most ambitious’, a view of Hanging Rock. All 'vividly portrayed’, according to the Tatler , 'the weird melancholy of the Australian bush’. William Short died of heart failure on 20 June 1917, just after making a speech at the wedding of a granddaughter at Burwood, his obituary stated. He and his wife had five daughters and five sons. Writers: Staff Writer Date written: 1992 Last updated: 2011
Born
b. 1833
Summary
William Wackenbarth Short was a painter and professional photographer. He came to Melbourne in 1852. Short applied for the position of artist on the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition in 1860. His application was unsuccessful.
Gender
Male
Died
20-Jun-17
Age at death
84