Ian Fairweather (born Sept. 29, 1891, Bridge of Allan, Scot., U.K.—died May 20, 1974, Brisbane, Austl.) was a Scottish-born Australian painter known both for his dramatic paintings that combined Chinese and Aboriginal influences and for his eccentric lifestyle.
Fairweather was the son of James Fairweather, a surgeon general for the Indian army. Between 1891 and 1901 he was raised by his aunts in Scotland while his parents lived in India. He joined the army in 1912 and fought in World War I until he was captured in France and became a German prisoner of war. After the war, Fairweather studied painting (1920–24) at the Slade School in London and learned Japanese at the School of Oriental Studies.
In 1928 Fairweather left England to travel throughout Asia, visiting such places as Shanghai, Beijing, Bali, and the Philippines. His paintings Bathing Scene, Bali (1933), Voyage to the Philippines (1935), Chinese Scene (1941), and Valley and Hills, Kulu (1949) reflect his extensive travels. In the 1940s he gave up the use of standard oil paints in favour of more-natural mediums such as casein, soap, and mixtures of oil and water. As a result of this change, many of his works either were ruined in shipment to exhibitions in London, Sydney, and Melbourne or deteriorated because of their fragile mediums.
Fairweather’s life story took a dramatic turn in 1952 when, at age 60, he decided to sail from the Australian city of Darwin to the Indonesian province of Bali on a man-made raft. After more than two weeks at sea, he narrowly missed being lost in the Indian Ocean when his raft ran aground on Roti Island. Although Fairweather himself was at a loss to explain why he had attempted such a dangerous journey, there is evidence that he was anxious and paranoid after nearly 200 paintings he had shipped to London were reported missing. He was later informed that many had been destroyed. After being arrested on Roti Island and deported to England, he departed for Australia, where he built a hut for himself on Bribie Island, off the coast of Queensland.
Over the course of the next two decades, Fairweather completed his greatest works. He led an intensely private life on Bribie Island, concealing himself from other people and usually painting only at night. The figures in his paintings became starker and clearer after 1952, and the images appeared bolder and more dramatic. The paintings Monsoon (1961–62), Monastery (1961), and House by the Sea (1967) show the deviation of his style away from the Post-Impressionism he employed in the 1930s and ’40s in favour of abstract art and Cubism.