Exhibitions
John Wolseley: Natural Selection: MALLEE/MAQUIS, 2008
The famous paragraph about a 'tangled bank' with which Charles Darwin ends The Origin of Species was based on a particular patch of ground in Kent which still remains there today, still enjoyed by the descendants of the same birds, insects and worms which he described. This exhibition is about two other patches of scrub—one I found in the sandhills of the West Victorian Mallee, the other on the slopes of Mont Sainte-Victoire in Provence.—John Wolseley
John Wolseley at Roslyn Oxley9 Sydney - Artmap.com
John Wolseley - Exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney, 2008
STOLEN RITUAL, 2006-07
A group exhibition featuring James Angus, Hany Armanious, Angela Brennan, Tony Clark, Destiny Deacon, John Firth-Smith, Fiona Hall, Christopher Hanrahan, Newell Harry, Lindy Lee, Linda Marrinon, David Noonan, Julie Rrap, Rohan Wealleans and John Wolseley.
John Wolseley Lichmera indistincta - Baniyala, 2009; watercolour on paper; 56 x 76 cm
PlaceMade : Australian Print Workshop | John WOLSELEY | Arrarente Desert
John Wolseley
John Wolseley, The Wood, The World, and The Parrot, 2006
John Wolseley Tracing the Wallace Line; wing leaf and land, 1999; watercolour on paper; 136 x 205 cm
PlaceMade : Australian Print Workshop | John WOLSELEY | Botanist's camp
John Wolseley 20. Bouvreuil pivoine , 2008; Kermis Oak charcoal, graqphite and watercolour on paper; 20.5 x 25 cm
2004: Australian Culture Now
There are a many exciting works by young contemporary artists in this exhibition, but John Wolseley takes the prize. - The Age Online
John Wolseley Godwits in flight, 2010; graphite on paper; 65 x 57 cm
John Wolseley: Natural Selection: MALLEE/MAQUIS, 2008
The famous paragraph about a 'tangled bank' with which Charles Darwin ends The Origin of Species was based on a particular patch of ground in Kent which still remains there today, still enjoyed by the descendants of the same birds, insects and worms which he described. This exhibition is about two other patches of scrub—one I found in the sandhills of the West Victorian Mallee, the other on the slopes of Mont Sainte-Victoire in Provence.—John Wolseley
John Wolseley