L. Scott Pendlebury or Laurence Scott Pendlebury was an Australian landscape and portrait artist and teacher. He married fellow artist Eleanor Constance "Nornie" Gude in January 1943 and they were the parents of Anne Lorraine Pendlebury, a stage, film and TV actress; and Andrew Scott Pendlebury a guitarist-songwriter. Pendlebury won the Wynne Prize four times for his landscape paintings with The Chicory Kiln, Phillip Island, Constitution Dock, Hobart, Old Farmhouse and Road to Whistlewood. He was a finalist in the Archibald Prize twenty-four times, including Nornie Gude and Anne and Drew Pendlebury . His work was presented in the state galleries of New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and Victoria. Pendlebury worked at Swinburne Technical College as an instructor from 1946 to 1963 and then as head of the art school until his retirement in 1974. He died in May 1986, aged 72.
Biography
Laurence Scott Pendlebury was born on 21 April 1914 in Melbourne. His father was Thomas Pendlebury, who worked at the Government Printing Office, and his mother was Jessie ; his older siblings were Thelma, Kath, Lyla/Leila and Thomas junior. Pendlebury attended the National Gallery of Victoria Art School from 1932 to 1938. While there, in 1936, he met fellow artist, Eleanor Constance "Nornie" Gude, daughter of Ballarat-based music teacher and orchestra conductor, Walter Gude. On 28 January 1943 Pendlebury and Gude married. During World War II, on 26 April 1945, Pendlebury enlisted in the Australian Army and was discharged as a Sergeant on 21 December that year. Pendlebury and Gude's children are Anne Lorraine Pendlebury, who became a stage, film and TV actress; and Andrew Scott Pendlebury a guitarist-songwriter. In May 1953 Pendlebury won the Dunlop Art Contest, with a first prize of A£300, ahead of Arthur Boyd, for his oil painting, Late Afternoon – Rhyll. It was Pendlebury's fourth award in the competition, he finished third in 1952, fourth in 1951, and fourth previously in 1950 – the competition's inaugural year. The contest was sponsored by the Dunlop Rubber Company of Australia and aimed to "foster contemporary Australian art on aesthetic merits alone". One of the 1953 judges, Arnold Shore, reported in The Argus, that Pendlebury's work was a "sober, well-considered landscape" and it won against about 900 entries from throughout Australia. When exhibited in Adelaide, The Advertisers Elizabeth Young preferred the watercolour entrants and felt Late Afternoon – Rhyll "completely lacks subtlety and with a slick harshness apes to a certain extent the contemporary approach, while having nothing of its essential spirit". Pendlebury has won the Wynne Prize for a landscape painting, four times: The chicory kiln, Phillip Island, Constitution Dock, Hobart, Old farmhouse, and Road to Whistlewood. He qualified as a finalist, twenty-four times, in the Archibald Prize by painting portraits of notable Australians, including related subjects: Nornie Gude , Walter Gude, Nornie Gude, Self Portrait, Nornie Gude, Anne as "Irena" in the Three Sisters, Nornie Gude, and Anne and Drew Pendlebury . His art work was presented in the state galleries of New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania and Victoria. Pendlebury worked at Swinburne Technical College as an instructor from 1946 to 1963 and then as head of the art school until his retirement in 1974. L. Scott Pendlebury died in May 1986, aged 72.