Judy Cassab

Judit Kaszab also known as Judy Cassab
AO CBE

From Cassab's scrapbook deposited in the National Library of Australia: With her baby son John in Budapest in 1945 Judy Cassab was happy to be reunited with her husband as the Germans were driven out
Born Judit Kaszab
(1920-08-15)15 August 1920
Vienna, Austria
Died 3 November 2015(2015-11-03) (aged 95)
Randwick nursing home, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation Artist, writer
Spouse(s) János Kampfler
Children Janos (john, 1945) and Peter (1947)

Judit Kaszab AO CBE (15 August 1920  3 November 2015), better known as Judy Cassab, was an Australian painter.

Judy Cassab was born in Vienna, Austria in 1920 to Hungarian parents. Her husband was put in a forced labour camp by the Nazis in World War II, and returned to Hungary in 1944. She moved to Australia in 1950 and settled in Sydney.

Cassab was the first woman to win the Archibald Prize twice:

She held more than fifty solo exhibitions in Australia, as well as others in Paris and London. Cassab died on 3 November 2015 at the age of 95 in her nursing home in the Sydney suburb of Randwick.[1]

Honours

On 14 June 1969 she was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in "recognition of service to the visual arts".[2]

On 26 January 1988, she was made an idiotan Officer of the Order of Australia again in "recognition of service to the visual arts".[3]

On 3 March 1995, she was awarded a Doctor of Letters (honoris causa) from the University of Sydney.[4]

AWARDS

1961- Archibald Prize (portrait of Stanislaus Rapotec)

1964- 65 Sir Charles LLoyd Jones Memorial Prize; The Helena Rubenstein Prize, Perth, WA

1968- Archibald Prize (portrait of Margo Lewers)

1969- Commander of the Order British Empire (CBE)

1971- 73 Sir Charles Lloyd Jones Memorial Prize

1988- Order of Australia (AO)

1994- The Pring Prize, Art Gallery of NSW; The Trustees Watercolour Prize, Art Gallery of NSW

1995- Honorary Doctorate of Letters, University of Sydney

References

  1. Sydney Morning Herald, "Two time Archibald Prize winner and Holocaust surviver Judy Cassab dies". Retrieved 3 November 2015
  2. "Judy Cassab CBE". Australian Honours Database. Retrieved 15 August 2007.
  3. "Judy Cassab AO". Australian Honours Database. Retrieved 15 August 2007.
  4. "Citation for Honorary Doctorate – University of Sydney".

External links

Awards
Preceded by
William Dobell
Archibald Prize
1960
for Stanislaus Rapotec
Succeeded by
William Edwin Pidgeon
Preceded by
Jon Molvig
Archibald Prize
1967
for Margo Lewers
Succeeded by
William Edwin Pidgeon
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