Lot Essay
McCubbin's view is taken from his home, Carlsburg, at 42 Kensington Road, South Yarra. The house, one of the earliest in Melbourne, was built c.1846-48 and was originally set on 27 acres. When the McCubbins moved in 1907, following McCubbin's trip to Europe, the size of the land had reduced significantly: 'the loveliest place I have ever lived in, a charming old colonial house of stone, cool on the hottest days, perched right over the Yarra with three acres of garden and trees', McCubbin to Tom Roberts, 1908. The views from the garden and the garden itself, planted with gums, fruit trees, a peppercorn, and an old spreading lime, provided McCubbin with inspiration for numerous paintings through the last decade of his life.
The property overlooked the gardener's cottage (visible in the centre of the present work) of neighbouring Como House owned by the Armytage family. Como House's extensive grounds ran all the way down from McCubbin's fence to the edge of the river. The present view, looking across the Yarra to Richmond and the Burnley quarries relates closely to Moonrise, 1909 (National Gallery of Victoria), and the favourite motif of the gardener's cottage was featured perhaps most beautifully in The Cottage Children (Rain and Sunshine), 1910 (Private collection).
The present picture was possibly bought by Golda from McCubbin's joint exhibition with his son Louis (Pictures By Fred and Louis McCubbin) at the Athaenaeum Art Gallery, Collins Street, Melbourne in August 1912.
The property overlooked the gardener's cottage (visible in the centre of the present work) of neighbouring Como House owned by the Armytage family. Como House's extensive grounds ran all the way down from McCubbin's fence to the edge of the river. The present view, looking across the Yarra to Richmond and the Burnley quarries relates closely to Moonrise, 1909 (National Gallery of Victoria), and the favourite motif of the gardener's cottage was featured perhaps most beautifully in The Cottage Children (Rain and Sunshine), 1910 (Private collection).
The present picture was possibly bought by Golda from McCubbin's joint exhibition with his son Louis (Pictures By Fred and Louis McCubbin) at the Athaenaeum Art Gallery, Collins Street, Melbourne in August 1912.