Age, Biography and Wiki

Neil Haddon was born on 1967, is a British-Australian painter. Discover Neil Haddon's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 57 years old?

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Neil Haddon Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Neil Haddon worth at the age of 57 years old? Neil Haddon’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. He is from . We have estimated Neil Haddon's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Neil Haddon is a British-Australian painter.

His paintings display a wide variety of influences and styles, from hard edge geometric abstraction to looser expressive figurative painting.

Haddon currently lives and works in Hobart, Tasmania.

Haddon was born in Epsom, England.

He was born at "Eversleigh" in Worple Road – the former residence of the English writer George Gissing.

1985

He earned a B-TEC Diploma in Art and Design from the Epsom School of Art, Surrey, England (1985–1987) (now the University for the Creative Arts), where he studied alongside the painter Cecily Brown.

1987

He received an Honours degree from West Surrey College of Art and Design (1987–1990) (now the University for the Creative Arts) where he studied under Stephen Farthing.

1990

Haddon relocated to Barcelona, Spain, in 1990 and lived and worked there until 1996.

He maintained a studio in Cornellá throughout this period.

1992

He held his first solo exhibition at Galería Carles Poy in 1992.

1996

In 1996 he moved to Tasmania, Australia.

He has lived and worked there since then.

He has held a variety of part-time teaching posts at the School of Creative Arts and Media, University of Tasmania, is a post-graduate supervisor, and is Head of Painting.

2003

His paintings were featured in Ten Days on the Island, 2003 and were described by Daniel Thomas as "a high-spirited meeting of Pop art and popular culture with austere reto-Futurist abstraction."

Haddon's work is held in private and public collections internationally and in Australia by the National Gallery of Victoria, Artbank; the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery; the University of Tasmania Fine Art Collection; Devonport Regional Gallery, and the Gold Coast Arts Centre.

2006

"Survivor (del tink gyp flynn)" was awarded the City of Devonport Art Award in 2006.

His paintings have been selected for other significant art prizes, including both the Wynne Prize and the Sulman Prize, both at Art Gallery of New South Wales.

His work "It's Difficult (this Tasmanian landscape)" was also a finalist in the $50,000 Arthur Guy Memorial Painting Prize at the Bendigo Art Gallery in 2023.

2008

"Purblind (Opiate)" won the $25,000 Glover Prize (Tasmania) 2008.

2010

Haddon was the Chair of Contemporary Art Tasmania from 2010 to 2016 and was a board member of Salamanca Arts Centre from 2018 to 2022.

Haddon's paintings combine a wide range of influences and styles, from geometric abstraction to figuration.

He has become known for using a variety of materials and techniques, from flat high gloss enamel painting to expressive oil painting.

The sources for Haddon's paintings come from an array of visual media that includes local newspaper images, archival photographs of Australia and the UK, and the paintings of earlier 'colonial' artists such as John Glover and Paul Gauguin.

His paintings have been described as "a meta-landscape mash up of samples from John Glover and Paul Gaugin and the reflectiveness of your granny's ornamental biscuit tins".

Kelly Gellatly, senior curator of contemporary art at the National Gallery of Victoria described Haddon's work as abstract painting that "doesn't depict a traditional landscape but is evocative in its use of darker aspects of landscape."

Haddon describes working from these sources as "a process of razing an image to the ground and then building back up."

2011

His painting "Portrait with Paperchains", featuring his brother-in-law Timothy Walker CBE, Chief Executive and Artistic Director of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, was awarded the A$25,000 City of Whyalla Art Prize in 2011.

2013

Haddon returned to judge the Whyalla Prize in 2013.

2014

In 2014 Haddon undertook a three-month residency in New York at the Australia Council for the Arts Greene Street Studio.

2016

Andrew Frost of The Guardian described Haddon's 2016 painting I Read Day of the Triffids When I Lived in England (and now I Live in Tasmania) as "a delightful post-painting nightmare."

Haddon's paintings have been exhibited in Australia, the US, and Europe.

Exhibitions include: Theatre of the World, MONA (and La Maison Rouge, Paris) curated by Jean-Hubert Martin, Platform Los Angeles, Strange Trees, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart; This Is No Fantasy, Melbourne; and MOP Gallery, Sydney.

2018

Haddon's painting "The Visit", inspired by his migration to Tasmania and H.G. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds was awarded the A$100,000 Hadley's Art Prize in 2018.

Hadley's Prize judge and Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery curator, Jane Stewart, described the painting as "a complex and accomplished painting that raises many questions about landscape, custodianship and contact history.”

2020

In 2020, he was awarded a Doctorate in Fine Art from the School of Creative Arts and Media, University of Tasmania (CAM).