Hans
			HEYSEN
		
	
	
	
	
	 Germany 
	
	
		1877 
		
	
	
	 –  
	 Australia
	
	
	
	
	
 	1968 
	
	
Australia from 1884; Europe, England 1899-1903
	
		
			In the Wonoka Country
			
		
		1930
		
		
	
	
	
	
oil on canvas
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
			
			50.0 (h)
			 x 75.0 (w)
			
			cm
			
	
	
	
 Hamilton Art Gallery
	
	
	
	
In the Wonoka Country 1930 exhibits a sense of space with emphasis on horizontal stability and order.[1] At the centre of its wide landscape format a road crosses a creek and leads into the distance, towards immense and monumental hill formations. The purple-blue distance of the massed hills and the flat-land ‘breathing space’ of the middle distance are established by a series of horizontal planes, differentiating the area between the foreground, middle ground and background. Heysen wrote of the study for this oil painting: ‘In the “Crossing” I tried to give that ominous silence of a “brooding” late afternoon—insisting on the horizontal lines—to give expression of value.’[2]
© Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2008
Andrews,  Hans Heysen, exhibition book, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2008, p 102
[1] The foreground of this view is Smith’s Creek, on Smiths Road, which leaves the Hawker–Wilpena Road two kilometres north-east of Hawker
[2] Heysen letter to Sydney Ure Smith, 14 September (no year), Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, MLMSS 31/4
