
Housing a permanent collection, Reflecting Canberra, and a variety of local, national and international exhibitions, CMAG provides a refreshing insight to the integration of social history and the visual arts.

Credo I from The cancellation series, 1973–2003
etching, aquatint, etching plate
dimensions variable
Purchased with funds donated by ACTTAB 2004
born 1946
Petr Herel was born in Hořice, Czechoslovakia and had established an enviable reputation as a printmaker in both Prague and Paris before arriving in Australia in 1973. Herel spent some time in Melbourne before returning to Europe where he taught at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Dijon, France, in 1977-1978. An offer to head the Graphic Investigation Workshop at the newly formed Canberra School of Art (now ANU School of Art) saw him return to Australia in 1979, and he stayed in that position until his retirement from teaching in 1998. Herel lives and works in Melbourne.
Since 1971 Herel has held numerous solo exhibitions
including a retrospective at the ANU Drill Hall Gallery (1999)
and a major survey of the above works at the Canberra
Museum and Gallery (2006). His work has been included
in many important group and invitation exhibitions
internationally. Herel has also published more than 90 artist
books between 1965 and 2005. His work is in the National
Gallery of Australia, the National Library of Australia, most
state galleries, and regional, corporate, institutional and
private collections throughout Australia. In Europe his
representation includes the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris;
the Museum of Contemporary Graphic Art, Fredrikstad,
Norway; the Museum of Modern Art, Skopje, Republic
of Macedonia; the National Gallery of Czech Art, Prague;
the Albertina, Vienna; and the British Museum, London.
The cancellation series consists of 35 selected plates
executed between 1973 and 2003, and of 5 pre-, and postcancellation
prints from each plate, all numbered Roman I/
- V/V. The works mark the anniversary of 30 years of the
artist’s life in Australia (the fi rst 30 years being spent in
Europe). The works are technically assured and conceptually
unique. They are informed by a wide-ranging and diverse
knowledge of the literature and art of the Western
world, underscored by the cultural richness of his native
Czechoslovakia. He uses his sources to create an art that
is uniquely his own but which alludes to a shared terrain
of cultural experiences in which each experience holds
a defi ning place in the ongoing and unfolding structure
of his own pictorial language.
Beauty for Herel is a concept that encapsulates possibilities
for enrichment, extension or shifting, and in inviting us
to share the taxonomies of his eccentric personal visual
language he asserts new concepts of beauty that push
the limits of our imaginations.
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