After meeting Bryan Robertson, the director of the
Whitechapel Gallery, Whiteley was included in the 1961 group show 'Recent Australian Painting,' where his
Untitled red painting was bought by the
Tate Gallery. He was the youngest living artist to have work purchased by the Tate, a record that still stands. In 1962, Whiteley married
Wendy Julius. Their only child, daughter
Arkie Whiteley, was born in
London in 1964. While in London, Whiteley painted works in several different series: bathing, the zoo and the
Christies. His paintings during these years were influenced by the modernist British art of the sixties – particularly the works of
William Scott and
Roger Hilton – and were of brownish abstract forms. It was these abstract works which led to him being recognised as an artist, at a time when many other Australian artists were exhibiting in London, but from 1963 he moved away from abstraction towards figuration. His farewell to abstraction,
Summer at Sigean, was a record of his honeymoon in France. He painted
Woman in bath (1963) as part of a series of works he was doing of bathroom pictures. It has primarily black on one side and has an image of his wife Wendy in a bathtub, seen from behind. Another in the series was a more abstracted
Woman in the bath II, which owed a debt to his yellow and red abstract paintings of the early sixties. In 1964, while in London, Whiteley became fascinated by the murderer
John Christie, who had committed murders in the area near where Whiteley was staying in
Ladbroke Grove. He painted a series of paintings based on these events, including
Head of Christie. Whiteley's intention was to portray the violence of the events, but not to go too far in showing something which people would not want to see. During this time, Whiteley also painted works based on the animals at the
London Zoo, such as
Two Indonesian giraffes, which he found sometimes difficult. As he said: "To draw animals, one has to work at white heat because they move so much, and partly because it is sometimes painful to feel what one guesses the animal 'feels' from inside." (Whiteley 1979: 1) Whiteley also made images of the beach, such as his yellowish painting and collage work
The beach II, which he painted on a brief visit to Australia before his return to London and his winning of a fellowship to America. Whiteley appears as a character in the book
Falling Towards England by
Clive James under the name Dibbs Buckley. His wife Wendy appears as "Delish". ==New York==