JOY WARREN Photo: Judith Crispin |
By Helen Musa
When I visited Joy Warren some weeks ago in
John James Hospital ,
a wicked inspiration led me to bring her a bunch of yellow gladioli.
Though grappling with spinal pain, Warren was right onto the
nuances, laughing about Barry Humphries even as she admired the sheer beauty of
the flowers – “I’ve always loved beautiful things,” she proclaimed.
But, true believer in the arts that she
was, Joy Warren was no Mrs Everage.
A larger-than-life personality and at the same
time a respectable PLC Melbourne girl, Warren first descended on the fledgling
capital in 1955 with her architect husband Bob, who would go on to design
everything from the Queanbeyan Swimming Pool to the purpose-built Solander Gallery
in Grey Street Deakin, now slated for demolition.
Papers held in the National Library of
Australia reveal that the Warrens
were roped into Canberra Repertory Society two days after arriving in the ACT.
Armed with a thespian background at Melbourne ’s National Theatre, (established in 1935 by soprano Gertrude Johnson) Joy trod the boards as Lady Macbeth while Bob designed
sets. Extraordinarily, Joy also played the role of a
public-service wife in a promotional film aimed at attracting cadet diplomats to
the Department of Foreign Affairs.
Her media-savvy background was to come in
handy when she later launched her own gallery. Many a journalist would quake at
a ferocious phone call from Warren
charging neglect of some important exhibition or artist.
But her husband's consulting work with the
UN took them to Indonesia
and Jordan in the 1960s,
though Joy maintained a Canberra
presence as president of the Arts Ball Committee from 1961 to 1970, organising
around nine balls to raise money for artists.
Once back in Canberra she preceded the 1982 opening of the
NGA by opening Solander gallery in 1974.
Acutely aware that she needed to develop
her knowledge of ‘the business,’ she found time to study art at the ANU. She
became a Commonwealth Valuer under the
Taxation Incentives for the Arts Scheme and vice-president of the Australian
Commercial Galleries Association from 1983 to 1984. She also served as a board member of the Canberra
Festival in 1975 and the Opera Board in 1984.
It is widely agreed that Warren
seduced Canberra into a sophisticated
understanding of art, exhibiting Australia ’s
most eminent artists and introducing painters and sculptors from Indonesia ,
Papua New and further afield.
It is equally well-known (indeed Warren
often boasted of it) that her powers of seduction extended well beyond the art sphere,
and in her “tell-all” autobiography, (whose process was cut short by the death
of its editor Wendy Brazil) she planned to name names, including at least one
Prime Minister. We may never know.
Warren knew a good party when she saw it
and until her last months enjoyed a drink, alarming staff at John James Hospital
by secreting multiple bottles of Black Label wherever she could, which they
struggled to confiscate, while she sat resplendent in her red kimono, sipping
from teacups. Red was her favourite colour and, the colour she wore to one
son’s wedding in a typical tilt at convention.
My own association with Warren began when I joined “Muse” arts
magazine as editor in 1990 and continued throughout my arts editorship of the
Canberra Times into the recent past. She was also generous enough to donate paintings presented at the annual ACT Arts Awards to Artsit of the Year Peter J. Casey and Min Mae.
I admired her outrageous conversations, her
skills in bridge, her unfading appreciation of the good-looking young men she
needed to have around her, her fastidious taste in 20th century art, and her dislike
of mediocrity. I was quite terrified of
her driving and once just survived a road trip in a red sports car bearing the number
plate "Joy" to Coolac for lunch with the founder of the Bald
Archy Prize, Peter Batey.
In January 2001 she was awarded the Medal
of the Order of Australia
(OAM) for service to the arts. She was unblushingly gleeful that some of her
contemporaries had been passed over -- she could be acerbic about those she did
not admire.
And yet, there was a deeper side to her
personality that put her ahead of her time. Joy Warren relished meeting and
encouraging people from indigenous and unfamiliar cultures, with whom she was
totally relaxed and she plainly valued
their art as highly as that of her famous client artists.
A farewell to Joy Warren took place on Sunday January 18 in the Canberra Yacht Club, of which she was a founding
member and a life associate. Not surprisingly, there was a large turnout of
people keen to mark the passing of a woman was anything but a Mrs Everage, but rather as they said, "Teh Queen of the Arts."
Joyce
Dorothy Warren, b. October 10, 1922, d. January 2, 2015.
She
is survived by her sons, Robert and Boyd, her grandchildren and
great-grandchildren.