During his lifetime, and in the decades following his premature death at the age of thirty-three, Australian artist Penleigh Boyd (1890-1923) received the greatest recognition for his evocative depictions of the Australian landscape shown under heightened atmospheric conditions.
Boyd’s life and art was inextricably connected to the First World War.
Serving with the Australian Imperial Forces in France, he was badly gassed at Ypres in September 1917, and convalesced in England, before returning home to Melbourne in March 1918.
Penleigh Boyd | Silver Light, Hawkesbury River, 1922 | Smith and Singer