Barbara Blackman AO (1928–2024), writer, poet and arts patron, was only fifteen when the ABC Weekly published one of her poems. She became a member of Brisbane's literary circle, which included Judith Wright and Thea Astley. In 1950 she was diagnosed with optic atrophy, and was declared blind by the age of 22. 'It seemed to me I was given a life sentence for a crime I had not committed,' she wrote in her 1997 biography Glass after Glass. Moving to Sydney to study, she met artist Charles Blackman. After they married in 1952, they moved to Melbourne, where they associated with artists Arthur Boyd, Fred Williams, Joy Hester and Mirka Mora among others. Along with modelling for her husband and their friends, Blackman worked as a magazine columnist and a radio-producer for Radio for the Print Handicapped. She interviewed hundreds of people for the National Library of Australia's oral history program. In 2007 Blackman published Portrait of a Friendship, which drew on her correspondence with Judith Wright. A documentary about her life, Seeing from Within, was released in 2017.
Long-term muse to her husband Charles Blackman (they divorced in 1978), Barbara appeared in many of his paintings including his 1956 series Alice in Wonderland. He drew this portrait of his wife in 1969.
Purchased 2009
© Charles Blackman/Copyright Agency, 2024