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Box Hill artists' camp

Tom Roberts, The Artists' Camp, 1886, National Gallery of Victoria
Arthur Streeton, June evening, Box Hill, 1887, Queensland Art Gallery
Frederick McCubbin, Down on His Luck, 1889, Art Gallery of Western Australia

The Box Hill artists' camp was a site in Box Hill, Victoria, Australia favoured by a group of plein air painters in the mid to late 1880s who later became associated with the Heidelberg School art movement, named after Heidelberg, the site of another one of their camps.

The Box Hill area was then on the outskirts of Melbourne and largely undeveloped, allowing artists convenient access to the Australian bush, as the Box Hill railway station had been completed only a few years prior. Tom Roberts, Frederick McCubbin and Arthur Streeton were among those who often stayed at the camp. Due to Box Hill's status as the first of these artists' plein air camps, a number of scholars have suggested that "Box Hill School" is a more appropriate name for the Heidelberg School movement.[1]

  1. ^ Nelson, Robert (1 May 2007). Australian impressionism, The Age. Retrieved 20 March 2024.

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