FLYING ART SCHOOL
In 1971 Merv Moriarty founded the Flying Art School, first known as EastAus Art School.

On September 24 of that year Merv Moriarty took off from Brisbane’s Archerfield Airport "with his newly acquired unrestricted pilots licence" on a 6,000 km solo flight to towns and centres along the coast north to Cairns, west to Mount Isa, returning to Archerfield via Longreach, Charleville, Roma and many smaller centres along the way. This was the beginning of the flying art school that he had worked toward for ages and the purpose of this first flight was to talk to representatives from the many towns and districts along the way, to tell them about his plans for the flying art school and to judge from their reaction, the viability of this school. The reaction was enthusiastic and EastAus the flying art school was born.

The following is his story of the creation and development of the early years of the Flying Art School.


MERV'S STORY

I have decided to take up the challenge of writing down my memories of all the pain and the joy of my years as 'The Flying Artist'. It will take time, years perhaps so I will do a little, piece by piece, when I can manage to find the time and the courage to revisit this part of my life.

Some of you visiting this site from out there somewhere, may have attended flying art school workshops, or you may have been one of the few dedicated people who helped my then wife Helen and me to get it started. If you are one of these people and you would like to add something to the story please get in touch, or write your experiences down and send them to me. You can email me directly through the Contact Us section of this website or make some comments on Merv's Blog.


I would love to hear from you.


Merv Moriarty


The Story

My wife Helen had just dropped me off at Archerfield Airport. It was one of those beautiful days that we always hoped for when we had something big to do more so, when the thing we were going to do is made much harder in bad weather. I loaded my luggage in the rear compartment and back seat of the aircraft I had hired from the Royal Queensland Flying School. It was with this school that I had done my flying training and the plane I had hired for the trip was one with which I was quite familiar, having flown it on many of my training flights, on my test flights and on the five hour solo cross country flight that all pilots must do as the final test before receiving their unrestricted pilots licence.

By the late 1960s I had established myself as an artist and an art educator and was asked by the Queensland University to conduct classes in visual studies for the Architecture Department. I was also asked by the head of the Australian Arts Council Queensland branch Dr Gertrude Langer to conduct workshops for the vacation schools at the Queensland University. Dr Langer also asked me to conduct workshops for the Arts Council in some isolated centres in Queensland. In response to expressed need for the opportunity to have access to good quality art education by many of the students who attended these workshops I came up with an answer to their needs in the form of the flying art school. But there is more to this part of the story and I will endeavour to get back to that. In order to get the flying art school up and running I had to train as a pilot, gaining an unrestricted pilots licence I set about forming the flying art school (called EastAus Art School).

I filled in my flight plan for the first time without an instuctor or testing officer checking it out, and handed it in to the man behind the counter at the Archerfield Flight Centre.

I started the engine of the aircraft for the first of the flying art school trips with that queasy feeling that we get when we are under the equal and opposite influence of two powerful sensations, one of great expectation, the other, great trepidation.

I returned from that trip a week later utterly exhausted but excited about the possibilities of the flying art school. Somehow I seemed to think that all the effort of etting the school going was over and it would become easier from here. Oh dear!

Over the years of my commitment I wrote a series of 23 books of lessons to provide written technical information and established a visiting schedule that included some 26 centres over a distance of thousands of kilometres. I visited each centre four times a year.












The story of Flying Arts, once called "The Flying Art School" and founded by Merv Moriarty.
To order a copy, please call Marilyn England, Ph. 07 3870 9538

Artist Education
'Many Swans' 1478 Sapphire Coast Drive, Wallagoot, NSW 2550 | Phone: 02 6494 1033 A/H: 02 6494 5144
Email: merv@artisteducation.com
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