ARTIST, PHYSICIST 

Biography

John Alexander Douglas Stockdale was born on March 15, 1936 in Queensland Australia. Dr. Stockdale became fascinated with painting in earnest while he was studying physics at Sydney University. His first paintings were in the abstract expressionist style and captured the attention of the Sydney art establishment with his first show at the Hungry Horse Gallery in Sydney. His paintings and photographs are in the collections of the National Gallery of Art Australia, the Corcoran Gallery, Washington, DC, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Berkeley Art Museum, and the University of Wollongong, NSW.

He believed the disparate worlds of science and art informed one another

As a physicist, he did research at the Australian Atomic Energy Commission and, in the United States, at Oak Ridge National Laboratories. He later went on to contribute to advanced laser research at New York University, The FORTH Institute in Heraklion Crete, and the Lawrence Livermore Laboratories in California.

A prolific artist his entire life, he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in 1970. He showed in New York first at the Allan Stone Gallery and later with the Bertha Urdang Gallery in New York and the Riva Yares Gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona. Travels and mathematical ideas often informed his art which frequently featured a formalized gridded background superimposed with natural and figurative elements.

Also an accomplished photographer, his photographs ranging from Tennessee country signage to rusted security shutters on Times Square perhaps best express his characteristic sardonic wit and sharp eye. He once said, "Photography can be dangerous because it can make something beautiful that isn't." He had one-man shows of his photographs at the OK Harris Gallery in New York and the Berkeley Museum of Art among other venues.

CV
Education
St. Paul's College at Sydney University
PhD in Physics, University of Tennessee
Active Displays
National Gallery of Art Australia
JOHNSTOCKDALE
JOHNSTOCKDALE

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