Frederick McCubbin (1855-1917) is the third Australian Impressionist we have studied this year. His earlier paintings, in particular, tended to be sombre works which often depicted the harshness of pioneer living. The Australian Impressionists, known as the Heidelberg School, set up camp at Box Hill and later Heidelberg in Victoria around 1885 and practiced out of doors studying the effects of light and colour. They differed at first from the French Impressionists in that they didn't use 'broken colour.' Whisperings in Wattle Boughs Down on his Luck The Lost Child The Bush Sawyers The North Wind On the Wallaby Track Lost Girl With a Bird at the King Street Bakery For more information on Australian Impressionism and the Heidelberg School see here.