It deals with his background, his relationship with Rex Battarbee and how he learned to paint.
[3] Lee Robinson had joined the Board out of the army and wrote a treatment for the documentary in January 1946.
[4] Robinson received basic advice on directing from Harry Watt, then in Australia shooting The Overlanders.
[5] Filming took around five months in mid 1946 in the Northern Territory, finishing in August, and was edited in Ralph Foster's flat.
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