Jacqueline Hick ('Jackie; 8 December 1919 – 11 May 2004) was an Australian painter whose work is held in the permanent collections of multiple museums in Australia.
[3] In 1950, she worked in the Hexagon group with fellow Australia artists John Dowie, David Dridan, Francis Ray Thompson, Douglas Roberts, and Pam Cleland.
[7]: 111 From 1968 until 1976 Hick was a trustee at the Art Gallery of South Australia,[2] the second woman to hold this position after Ursula Hayward.
Hick identified with the Antipodeans, Australia artists working on the themes of "isolation, drought, exploration, pioneers, and colonial crime".
[7] Hick's work is mentioned multiple times in art historian Bernard Smith's 2001 book on Australian painting.