In 1949, after the birth of Georges' and Mirka's first son
Philippe Mora (a filmmaker), they joined his family in
New York, then in July 1951 moved on to
McKinnon, Melbourne where he adopted the name Georges Mora. With characteristic adaptability he took up management of a
matzo factory. Seeking more romantic quarters Georges and Mirka moved into
Grosvenor Chambers (
Ola Cohn's former studio) at 9
Collins Street Melbourne (the so called 'Paris End'). Sons
William Mora, born in 1953, and
Tiriel Mora (1958), are respectively an art dealer and an actor.
Mirka Café Recognising that their hospitality and cuisine were marketable, the Moras opened a coffee lounge. Mirka Café was opened by
Jean Sablon in December 1954 at 183
Exhibition Street and was the venue for the first major solo exhibition by
Joy Hester. It was the first in Melbourne where patrons could eat at tables on the pavement in the Parisian style and the café became the watering-hole of Melbourne's avant-garde. Patrons ate from Expressionist crockery by
Arthur Boyd and
John Perceval, were seated on surrealist furniture, and surrounded by murals and sculptures by
Clifford Last, Ian Sime and Julius Kane.
Contemporary Art Society and MOMAA In 1956, Georges Mora was elected President of the
Contemporary Art Society and declared at a CAS meeting that: "We must break down this prejudice in the world that Australia is an artistically backward country. There is only one solution: that is, the pushing of Australian artistic achievements into the world and to bring the world’s artistic achievements into this country." Artists donated paintings towards an inaugural fundraising exhibition in 1957. In 1958 Mora helped
John and
Sunday Reed transform the Contemporary Art Society gallery, where George's wife
Mirka had exhibited in August the year before into the '
Museum of Modern Art (and Design) of Australia' (MOMAA), modelled on
MoMA in New York, with John as its director and located in Tavistock Place, a lane-way off 376
Flinders Street, Melbourne.
Café Balzac In 1958 Mora established Café Balzac in
East Melbourne gaining a reputation as a restaurateur serving classic
French cuisine to an eager clientele, which included a gathering of the most significant contemporary Australian artists, to whom he proffered the walls of his establishment. A mural commissioned by Mora in 1962 was painted as individual panels by three Sydney-based '
Annandale Imitation Realists'; Colin Lanceley, Mike Brown and Ross Crothall in exchange for meals and accommodation. It survives as the largest, and one of the best known, examples of the Australian Pop Movement of the early 1960s. Ross Crothall's panel has an inscription "To George(sic) Mora, with love."
Aspendale The Moras' modernist house at bayside
Aspendale was designed in 1961 by architect Peter Burns. The house opened onto a common courtyard shared by the Moras' close friends
Sunday and
John Reed art patrons and founders of the
Heide Circle and was regularly visited by artists
Charles Blackman,
Albert Tucker,
John Perceval,
Sidney Nolan,
Joy Hester,
John Olsen,
Colin Lanceley,
Gareth Sansom,
Mike Brown,
Martin Sharp,
Asher Bilu and
Ivan Durrant. They were joined by prominent journalists and writers Barrett Reid, Brian McArdle and Philip Jones, who found company amongst the likes of French
mime Marcel Marceau,
Barry Humphries, photographers such as
Robert Whitaker and
Mark Strizic, and filmmaker
Nigel Buesst. == Tolarno Galleries ==