Hans
			HEYSEN
		
	
	
	
	
	 Germany 
	
	
		1877 
		
	
	
	 –  
	 Australia
	
	
	
	
	
 	1968 
	
	
Australia from 1884; Europe, England 1899-1903
	
		
			White gums
			
		
		1926
		
		
	
	
	
	
oil on canvas
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
			
			83.3 (h)
			 x 105.0 (w)
			
			cm
			
	
	
	
 Tamworth Regional Gallery
	
	
	
	
“The beauty of the gum is a quiet beauty … It is a poet’s tree, a painter’s tree … But even in my short stay of five years in Hahndorf thousands of acres have been cut down for firewood and many of my old favourites have gone. In fact so often has this happened that I approach them with caution so as to make myself as little conspicuous as possible when painting them—it seems that the mere fact of my admiring a tree seems to draw the owner’s attention to its usefulness for firewood.”[1]
It was with regret that I saw two fine white gums felled on our road—this regret being mixed with astonishment, as I thought I had been given to understand that I had safeguarded these trees for some time to come … I view further felling of the trees on our road with the greatest concern. The are and have always been a constant pleasure to me as well as numerous visitors, for it is an almost unique sight to see a country road where nature’s fine trees have not been indiscriminately and ruthlessly destroyed.[2]
[1] Hans Heysen, March 1914, quoted in Thiele, p 184
[2] Hans Heysen, quoted in Thiele, p 184
