Trained in art by
Julian Ashton, and favouring members of the
Society of Artists, Sydney, Ure Smith was a keen proponent of Australian art and to some extent its early modernists, though he was not sympathetic to abstraction, and his attitudes were influential on the content of
Art in Australia, which sprang from his success in publishing the popular, high-quality photo-engravings by Hartland & Hyde in the
J. J. Hilder Watercolourist exhibition catalogue in 1916. Fine illustrations continued to be a profuse and celebrated feature of the magazine. While his friends the Lindsays and
Hans Heysen were conservative, Ure Smith encouraged progress in Australian art, supported the Contemporary Group in Sydney, the Melbourne
Herald Exhibition of French and British Contemporary Art (1939) and imported works by
Henri Matisse and
André Derain for Society of Artists exhibitions. or had lengthy articles on featured artists. In addition, content was enhanced with the work of designers and illustrators, including
Douglas Annand who drew for Sydney Ure Smith's publications, the
Home,
Art in Australia and the
Australian National Journal between 1935 and 1939. Though devoted solely to the visual arts, a literary supplement to
Art in Australia was proposed in 1917 and prepared during 1918, but was abandoned despite pressure from
Norman Lindsay. The magazine did published some poetry and fiction during the 1920s including that of Lindsay, who promoted his conservative views, and of his son,
Jack,
Kenneth Slessor and
Hugh McCrae, and each had individual numbers devoted to their works, while other contributors included
Zora Cross,
Dorothea Mackellar,
Furnley Maurice, and
Dowell O'Reilly. In 1924
Art in Australia held a short story competition, won by
Katharine Susannah Prichard's
The Grey Horse and though she contributed more, from the 1930s literary works were reserved for the companion magazine,
The Home, a more regular publisher of prose and poetry in the Art in Australia group. == Cessation ==