Tom Bass AM
| | |
Tom Bass was born in 1916 and, after various jobs during the
depression and army service during WWII, he began his career
as a sculptor upon graduating from the National Art School
in 1948.
Bass was greatly influenced by what he had learned from Datillo
Rubbo, whose art school he attended in 1937-40, and he also
benefited from being taught by Lyndon Dadswell. Bass was Dadswell's
assistant in 1949-50, after which he taught at the National
Art School until 1953. From 1951 to 1964, he held various executive
positions with the Sculptor's Society, of which he was a founding
member.
Tom Bass' work as a sculptor has been concerned
with communities, namely schools, universities and government
and corporate and religious institutions. In the late forties,
Bass developed his philosophy of working as a sculptor in
making totemic forms and emblems, namely work expressing
ideas of significance to particular communities or to society
at large. Examples of his work include The Trial of Socrates
and The Idea of a University at Wilson Hall, Melbourne University,
the winged figure of Ethos in Civic Square, Canberra, representing
the spirit of the community and the Lintel Sculpture at the
National Library in Canberra, representing the "idea" of
Library.

National Library
Over a twenty-five year period, this concept of the totem
remained virtually the single focus of his work and is clearly
represented in Bass's many works in Australia and overseas.
In 1980, Tom Bass had a one-man exhibition at the David Jones
Gallery in Sydney. Since the late '90's, Bass participated
in exhibitions with Defiance Gallery in Newtown and with Sculpture
by the Sea both in Sydney.
In 1974, Bass founded his school on Broadway, relocating to
Erskineville in 1998. Bass's aim at the school was to teach
the fundamental principles of sculpture in a workshop tradition.
Over the thirty years, many people have passed through the
school, which has a unique place in the world, and his teaching
has achieved mastery over many years. Bass has continued to
review his ways of being a sculptor and making sculpture, this
in an era which has seen radical change in modes of social
communication and which has required new and different forms
of expression. Whilst Bass has continued to produce many significant
works, the main focus of the last 30 years is and has been
the communication, through his teaching, of the ideas and concepts
vital to his tradition.
In March 2003, he handed over the School to a Management Committee
as it became an Incorporated not-for-profit Association. In
this way, the management of the school was provided for and,
in his 88th year, Bass continues as an iconic presence and
a dedicated teacher.
In 1989, Tom Bass was made a member of the Order of Australia
for his services to sculpture.
In 1996, Bass published "Tom Bass - Totem Maker",
which was co-authored by Harris Smart (Australian Scholarly
Publishing). In 1998, Bass published "Occasional Prayers".
Currently (in 2004) Bass is working on
a book "Ways to
Make Sculpture" with Michael Christie.
Tom
Bass - List of Major Works>>

David Jones Exhibition, 1981
|