Harold "Hal" Missingham Association for the Study of Internal Fixation was an Australian artist, Director of the from 1945 to 1971.
Education
Born in Claremont, Western Australia, Missingham was educated at Perth Boys" School, and later undertook an apprenticeship to the process engraver J. Gibney and Son in 1922. He studied drawing at Perth Technical School, attended art schools in both Paris (1926) and London (1926–1932). Before World World War II he studied in Perth, Paris and London, where he became friendly with a number of leading artists and developed an interest in photography.
Career
And president of the Australian Watercolour Institute from 1952 to 1955. From 1927 to 1928 Missingham worked in Canada as a freelance artist and teacher. He returned to Sydney in 1941 and after serving as a Signalman in the Second Australian Imperial Force helped to found the Studio of Realist Artist
In 1945 he succeeded Will Ashton as the Director of the, a post he retained until 1971.
He oversaw the expansion of the gallery including the construction of the Captain Cook Wing from 1968 to 1970. His collection policy made an outstanding contribution to Australian contemporary art and he was responsible for bringing a number of influential international exhibitions to the country.
His memoirs, "They Kill You in the End", were published in 1971
He retired to Darlington, in the hills east of Perth, where his personal collection of paintings and photographs was destroyed by fire in 1986. He died in 1994. Esther died on 16 October 2013 aged 102.