Hans
			HEYSEN
		
	
	
	
	
	 Germany 
	
	
		1877 
		
	
	
	 –  
	 Australia
	
	
	
	
	
 	1968 
	
	
Australia from 1884; Europe, England 1899-1903
	
		
			Pewsey Vale
			
		
		1947
		
		
	
	
	
	
watercolour on paper
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
			
			31.8 (h)
			 x 38.8 (w)
			
			cm
			
	
	
	
 Gift of Miss Eva Waite 1954, Art Gallery of South Australia
	
	
	
	
Heysen made a number of paintings depicting Pewsey Vale, such as Folding Hills 1933 and Pewsey Vale 1947. The subject was a pastoral property in the Barossa Ranges. Here, he captured the large sky over the landscape, filled with clouds, and captured the expressive power of the sky and its impact on the mood of the scene.
When interviewed towards the end of his life, Heysen discussed his attitude to the sky. He said ‘Australian painters generally have paid too little attention to the sky. The landscape painter has to realize that it is not something secondary, like a backdrop, but that it is above you, at the sides of you, and all around. It curves from the horizon to the zenith. The moment you forget this you tend to make it like a backdrop, or something tacked on the top’.[1]
[1] Colin Thiele, Heysen of Hahndorf, Adelaide: Rigby, 1968, p 312
 

