 |
STEVENS, BERTRAM (1872-1922), literary and art critic,
|
son of William Mathison Stevens, was born at Inverell, New South Wales, on 9
October 1872. Educated at state primary schools he was a great reader and became
a man of wide knowledge and culture. His first position was in a solicitor's
office and it was intended that he should study law, but he began writing for
the press. He was well-known in literary circles and in 1904 edited My
Sundowner and other Poems by John
Farrell (q.v.) with a memoir. In 1906 he prepared An Anthology of
Australian Verse, in which he was much hampered by copyright restrictions,
but he had a much freer hand in The Golden Treasury of Australian Verse,
which appeared in 1909. the first anthology of Australasian verse of any
importance. In the same year he had the difficult task of succeeding A. G.
Stephens (q.v.) as editor of the Red Page of the Bulletin. At the end
of 1911 he became editor of the Lone Hand and conducted this journal for
seven years. He was one of the founders and was joint-editor of Art in
Australia from its beginning in 1916 until his death. He also did literary
criticism for the Sydney Mail and other journals, published editions of
Australian poets, prepared other anthologies, and edited books on leading
Australian artists. Much of his literary work is listed in Serle's
Bibliography of Australasian Poetry and Verse and Miller's Australian
Literature. He died suddenly at Sydney, on 14 February 1922. He left a
widow, two sons and a daughter. At the time of his death he was vice-president
of the New South Wales Institute of Journalists. He had been preparing A
History of Australian Literature for some years before his death, but this
was never published. Many of his papers are at the Mitchell library, Sydney.
Stevens was a modest man of quiet charm. He was completely unselfish, always
anxious to help the literary beginner or struggling poet. He was a sound, though
not great critic of both literature and art, for both of which he did an immense
amount of work, which had much influence on the cultural life of Australia.
|