Alan McLeod McCullochAO was one of Australia's foremost art critics for more than 60 years, an art historian and gallery director, cartoonist, and painter.
Life
Born in Melbourne and brought up in Sydney, returning to Melbourne as a teenager, McCulloch initially worked in banking but enrolled in night classes at art school to pursue his developing art interest. He wrote journalism and art criticism and cartoons for Australian newspapers from 1927. In 1946 he moved to America where, in 1948, he married Ella Bromley Moscovitz an Australian-born actress, businesswoman and US citizen. They remained together until her death in 1991. After a period in Europe and the UK the couple returned to Australia to live in Victoria's Mornington Peninsula. He was art critic for the Argus in 1944–1947 and after the war became art editor of the Australasian Post, to which he also contributed cartoons. In 1951 he became an associate editor for Meanjin, and art critic on the Melbourne Herald, 1952–1982. He held several solo exhibitions of his paintings and drawings in London and Melbourne. As a curator, in 1965, he assembled an exhibition of Aboriginal Bark Paintings from the Chaseling and Cahill collections from the Museum of Victoria to tour to the USA. He was the inaugural director of the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery, established in 1969 by the Mornington Shire Council, and it was under his leadership that the MPRG began developing a specialist collection of Australian prints and drawings. He was curator of The Heroic Years of Australian Art 1977–78 touring exhibition.
''The Encyclopedia of Australian Art''
In 1968 he published his most significant work, The Encyclopedia of Australian Art, which started as a scrapbook of cuttings kept since the 1940s, and which became the main reference for connoisseurs, collectors, dealers, critics and historians of Australian art. He was its sole author for several updates and reprints and a completely new edition in 1984, then was joined by his daughter Susan McCulloch in 1990, who co-edited for its 1994 edition. In that, McCulloch's personal note was the last thing he wrote, just two weeks before he died. In it he says, "As with electricity we know what art does but we don't know what it is." He then quotes the compiler of the Oxford Dictionary as saying: "The word 'art' gave me more trouble than any other word in the English language.". His daughter Susan and his granddaughter Emily McCulloch Childs continue work on the Encyclopedia into the third generation, using the criteria established by Alan McCulloch in 1968; artists are chosen for inclusion if their work is represented by major purchases in a national, state, or regional gallery or if they have won a significant prize. The Encyclopedia is now in its 4th edition, which was recently reported by The Age newspaper as having almost completely sold out.