Marjorie Gwynne

[2] In 1910, the Adelaide Drawing and Sketch Club produced a magazine entitled The High Light with literary and artworks from various Australian writers and artists, including Mary Gilmore.

[4] That same year, Church married Edward Gywnne[2] and began exhibiting under the name Marjorie Gwynne.

[5] It was included in an exhibition in 1952 along with works by Nora Heyson, Jacqueline Hick and Elaine Haxton.

[7] In 1941, the National Gallery of Australia purchased its first painting by Gwynne and a report at the time commented that "she is one of those artists who is also a thinker.

Their first exhibition was in 1944, and a review of it describes Gwynne's work as "vivid, convincing, and colorful, [it] first attracts, then pleases and satisfies.

Marjorie Gwynne, Australian artist