Between The Covers

Speaking with Australian author Paul J. Greguric

March 02, 2022 Shawline Publishing
Speaking with Australian author Paul J. Greguric
Between The Covers
More Info
Between The Covers
Speaking with Australian author Paul J. Greguric
Mar 02, 2022
Shawline Publishing

Bradley sits down with Paul J. Greguric and discusses his new book about the Archibald Prize and it's history. 

Buy the book here - https://www.shawlinepublishing.com.au/search/display/43-the-man-behind-the-prize

Paul Greguric grew-up in Adelaide. He studied at the Education Faculty of Sydney University. After graduating, he taught English in NSW high schools for over two decades. He has published both fiction and non-fiction in numerous journals, newspapers and magazines. He currently lives in the suburb of Sydney suburb of Waterloo.

THE MAN BEHIND THE PRIZE LIVED A LIFE THAT WAS NOT WITHOUT TRAGEDY AND MYSTERY...
Every year thousands of Sydneysiders visit the Art Gallery of NSW to view the entrants in the Archibald Prize for Portraiture, which carries the primary aim to foster portraiture, as well as to perpetuate the memory of great Australians.

Across Australia, thousands more will see the travelling exhibition of the prize.

Sydney's fountain in Hyde Park is named after him.

He is the founding editor of our nation's most iconic newspapers, The Bulletin. Yet extraordinarily little is known about the man behind the prize, J.F. Archibald.

As editor of the Bulletin newspaper, he nurtured the careers of Australian writers and artists from Mile Franklin and Banjo Paterson to Norman Lindsay and Francis Rodway. In 1900, he commissioned Melbourne portrait artist John Longstaff to paint a portrait of poet Henry Lawson for 50 guineas.

So pleased with this portrait, he left money in his will for an annual portrait prize, which was first awarded in 1921.

"A marvellous and articulate account of a life...a wonderful and professional job as author and biographer to the great Australian man we all know of, but know little about..." - James, Indiebook Reviewer

Show Notes

Bradley sits down with Paul J. Greguric and discusses his new book about the Archibald Prize and it's history. 

Buy the book here - https://www.shawlinepublishing.com.au/search/display/43-the-man-behind-the-prize

Paul Greguric grew-up in Adelaide. He studied at the Education Faculty of Sydney University. After graduating, he taught English in NSW high schools for over two decades. He has published both fiction and non-fiction in numerous journals, newspapers and magazines. He currently lives in the suburb of Sydney suburb of Waterloo.

THE MAN BEHIND THE PRIZE LIVED A LIFE THAT WAS NOT WITHOUT TRAGEDY AND MYSTERY...
Every year thousands of Sydneysiders visit the Art Gallery of NSW to view the entrants in the Archibald Prize for Portraiture, which carries the primary aim to foster portraiture, as well as to perpetuate the memory of great Australians.

Across Australia, thousands more will see the travelling exhibition of the prize.

Sydney's fountain in Hyde Park is named after him.

He is the founding editor of our nation's most iconic newspapers, The Bulletin. Yet extraordinarily little is known about the man behind the prize, J.F. Archibald.

As editor of the Bulletin newspaper, he nurtured the careers of Australian writers and artists from Mile Franklin and Banjo Paterson to Norman Lindsay and Francis Rodway. In 1900, he commissioned Melbourne portrait artist John Longstaff to paint a portrait of poet Henry Lawson for 50 guineas.

So pleased with this portrait, he left money in his will for an annual portrait prize, which was first awarded in 1921.

"A marvellous and articulate account of a life...a wonderful and professional job as author and biographer to the great Australian man we all know of, but know little about..." - James, Indiebook Reviewer