Section
3
"CLAWS IN THE ARSE"
By Sandra Jobson Darroch
The
"Wyewurk" diptych - left Garry Shead, right
Brett Whiteley
LAWRENCE'S
VISIT to Australia in 1922, and the major novel he wrote
here, Kangaroo, have inspired a number of leading
Australian artists and creative minds.
The novel has acted as a catalyst for their talents, producing
major works. Kangaroo provides a common thread
that winds through their work, and links them.
Australia's leading composer, Peter Sculthorpe, sensed
an affinity with Lawrence in their mutual pantheism and
love of landscape.
He first wrote a song cycle, "Sun", based on
three of Lawrence's poems, and later developed this into
a major work, "Irkanda IV".
The lines in Lawrence's poem
A
sun will rise in me.
I shall slowly resurrect,
Already the whiteness of false dawn is on my inner
ocean. |
deeply affected Sculthorpe.
"It
was in this section that I finally managed to recompose
my setting of the DH Lawrence poem 'Sun in Me'. The
melisma of the solo violin is a reflection of the
poem. Thus, in the final bars, there is a high white
C. Lawrence in his poem relates sun and atom to God
and atom. The high white C, which must be the whitest
note of all, represents the word 'God'."
|
Lawrence
continued to inspire Sculthorpe, and in 1963 he composed
a work in five movements, "The Fifth Continent".
The third movement was revised in 1976 to become a smaller
work, "Small Town", based on Thirroul, which
he felt epitomised all old Australian country towns.
The statue of the returned Digger, which used to stand
outside the School of Arts at Thirroul, and which Lawrence
mentions in Kangaroo, led Sculthorpe to introduce
an oboe solo, mingled with the bugle sound of the "Last
Post", giving a chilling, nostalgic undercurrent
to the lyrical piece.
Artist Garry Shead, too, responded to the military undercurrents
in Kangaroo in his celebrated Kangaroo series
of paintings and etchings.
Shead also uses the image of the Diggers' memorial, while
always looming in his pictures of Lawrence and Frieda
at "Wyewurk" is the mysterious, sometimes menacing,
sometimes slightly comical, figure of the kangaroo.
In 2011 Sculthorpe and Shead collaborated on a DVD production
using the Kangaroo series and the music of "Small
Town".
Shead also collaborated with another great Australian
artist who was strongly attached to, perhaps haunted by,
Lawrence and Thirroul - the late Brett Whiteley.
In 1975 the two painters decided to go down to Thirroul
and paint a diptych.
