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Creator: Goodchild, John C. (John Charles), 1898-1980
Place of Creation: South Australia
Published by South Australia. Government Publicity and Tourist Bureau
Date of creation : ca. 1935
This item is reproduced courtesy of the South Australian Tourism Commission. It may be printed or saved for personal research or study. Use for any other purpose requires written permission from the South Australian Tourism Commission and the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form.
Format : Poster
Flinders Ranges, South Australia's winter sunland
Poster promoting the Flinders Ranges as a tourist destination, created by the artist John C. Goodchild and published by the South Australian Government Publicity and Tourist Bureau.
South Australia first established a Tourist Bureau in 1908. The bureau was associated for many decades with the Department of Immigration.
In the 1930s, the South Australian Government Publicity and Tourist Bureau produced a number of striking travel posters highlighting tourist destinations in this state. These examples were created in the 1930s and 1940s showcasing the Flinders Ranges, the Lights of Adelaide, the Murray River and the Morialta Conservation Park.
The commissioned artists had distinguished careers. John Charles Goodchild (1898 - 1980) was born in London. After his family emigrated to South Australia he worked as a sign writer. After his World War One service he attended the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts where he was also later a teacher and then principal. Goodchild was a board member of the Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery. In 1945 the Australian War Memorial in Canberra commissioned him as an official war artist.
Frederick Millward Grey (1899 - 1957), who specialised in lithography, studied art in London and served in World War One. In Adelaide he became a teacher and then director at the School of Fine Arts and then principal of the South Australian School of Art from 1946 to 1956.
Biographical information on the artist McClean is not known.
The posters were each exhibited by the National Library of Australia in 1999-2000 in an exhibition called Follow the Sun: Australian Travel Posters 1930s - 1950s. According to the National Library, the posters are representative of the modern style of art, first seen by the Australian public on billboards, magazines and in advertisements. The Follow the Sun exhibition is available online.
Trading places: Australian travel posters, 1909-1990. Clayton, Vic.: Monash University Gallery and National Centre for Australian Studies, 1991. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Monash University Gallery, 6 March-11 May, 1991
Australian Dictionary of Biography Online: Gibberd, Joyce, Goodchild, John Charles (1898-1980)
Australian War Memorial See: Encyclopedia: Australian official war artists
Department of Environment and Natural Resources: Morialta National Park brochure (pdf)
Design & Art Australia Online: Frederick Grey
Downstream: the River Murray in South Australia See: River Murray focus
Follow the sun: Australian travel posters 1930s to 1950s National Library of Australia
State Library of South Australia: SA Memory: Rest & relax on the Murray trip, rail and river tours
Trove: "Radiant city of the Night" The Advertiser, Tuesday 29 December 1936
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Flinders Ranges tourism poster from the 1930s
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