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Auckland City
Art Gallery A quarterly publication containing news, views and reviews of activities at the Auckland City Art Gallery Exhibitions Boyd Webb August 6 to September 27
This exhibition, sponsored by the Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council, will tour to other New Zealand centres. Bing Dawe, Neil Dawson, Stephen Clarke
August 6 to September 27 Dawson will present a large scale installation specifically designed for the Gallery space and constructed on site. Like his recent show at the Denis Cohn Gallery, and Echo (illustrated), which was suspended above the Christchurch Arts Centre, the Auckland City Art Gallery work will continue his investigations into perception, drawing and site and spectator relationships.
Dawe and Clarke, by contrast, will present sculpture less firmly rooted in a particular structure than Dawson's. Both are gifted craftsmen who delight in the forming, shaping and joining of skeletal forms. Balance and tension are central concerns in these poised and deliberate works. European Sculpture Gallery Foyer through July, August and
September Tapestry: Henry Moore & West Dean Exhibition closes August 2 This exhibition consists of eight tapestries of life-size figures, together with Henry Moore's watercolour drawings from which they were woven and a photographic display by Rosemary Ellis showing their production.
The tapestries were commissioned by the artist's daughter, Mary Moore, and woven at the Tapestry Weaving Studio at West Dean House, near Chichester, in southern England. The owner of West Dean (an impressive flint mansion built by lames Wyatt in 1804) Mr Edward James, established an educational trust to create a college at West Dean. The aim of the Trust is the preservation and restoration of traditional arts and crafts. The Tapestry Studio employs six weavers who work under the direction of Eva-Louise Svensson. Five weavers were responsible for the Henry Moore tapestries, which took three and a half years to complete. The mother-child relationship is the predominant theme of the works. The original drawings are small and were not drawn specifically to be made into tapestries, so the transformation is one of scale and interpretation. Each weaver exercised her own choice: what colours, what dyes, what combination of threads, what thickness, what texture, what technique. Henry Moore himself insisted on this interpretative role. 'if it were just going to be a colour reproduction I wouldn't be interested,' he said. 'It is because it is a translation from one medium into another and has to be different that you get the surprise'. The exhibition has been organised by the
Auckland City Art Gallery and it will tour the main centres in New Zealand as
follows: The exhibition was opened in Auckland on June 18 by Mr R. J. Stratton, the British High Commissioner. An illustrated catalogue is available.
HENRY MOORE, O.M., C.H. Henry Moore was born in 1898, the son of a coalminer, and educated in Yorkshire. During the first world war he served in the Army in France and was gassed at Cambria. During the Second World War he was an official war artist. Henry Moore returned from military service to become a schoolteacher in 1919, but a few months later was awarded an ex-serviceman's educational grant, which he used to become a student at the Leeds School of Art, where in 1921 he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London. His next scholarship was a travelling one, which allowed him to spend six months in 1925 in France and Italy, where he became particularly impressed and influenced by the frescoes of Masaccio. He held his first one-man exhibition in London in 1928. Since then he has had numerous exhibitions in capitals and major cities all over the world. At the Venice Biennale in 1948 he was awarded the international first prize for sculpture. In 1953 he was awarded the international sculpture prize at the Sao Paulo Biennale. In 1974 the Moore sculpture museum was opened in Toronto. There are examples of his sculpture in all the major museums of Europe and America. He has taken prizes at famous international exhibitions, and has received numerous foreign awards. He is associated with academies of art in several countries, and has received honorary degrees from many universities. Henry Moore is married (his wife is Russian by birth), and has one daughter, Mary. He has lived in Hertfordshire since 1942.
Clive Stone Hibiscus Coast Project Closes August
2 Times Past. . . Future Art Gallery Princes Street
Site There was also a
report on properties in Princes Street owned by the council, and the Library
Committee recommended that four sections at the corner of Alfred and Princes
Street be extended to the corner of O'Rorke Street be approved as a site for an
art gallery. This was adopted, and it was decided that the question of the
acquisition of the lessee's interest, estimated at £21,117 ($42,000.00) be
deferred. The Library Committee was asked to prepare a complete report on the
requirements of its three departments, the library, the Old Colonists' Museum
and the Art Gallery. Note: O'Rorke Street no longer exists, more recent University buildings cover the area. STOP PRESS Grace Joel 1865-1924: Paintings &
Drawings July 30 to September 4 In 1895 she was a founder member of the Easel Club in Dunedin, along with Miss J. Wimperis and Messrs Nerli, O'Keeffe and Havvcridge.
Grace Joel resigned from the Council of the Otago Art Society in March 1899 and travelled to London. She was represented by a work in the Royal Academy exhibition of 1908 entitled Autumn. In 1922 she exhibited with the Royal Scottish Academy, and in 1923 she received 'honourable mention' for a picture called Sympathy in an exhibition at the Salon des Artistes Francais. Miss Joel was financially independent and appeared to have taken little interest in selling her paintings. Her last visit to New Zealand took place in 1906. The exhibition contains thirty-two works from public and private collections. It was organised by the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. An illustrated catalogue is available priced at $3.00 a copy. Modern French Prints July 30 to September
11 Recent acquisitions include some excellent prints by a number of less well-known artists, such as lbels Gavarni, Cheret, Dulac, Lunois, Helleu, and Robbe. Because they largely confined themselves to graphic media, these artists were inevitably over-shadowed by artists such as Millet, Manet, Cézanne, Tissot, Signac and Fantin-Latour. The latter group also made prints - a selection of which is included in this exhibition - but achieved their artistic reputations mainly on the strength of their paintings.
Some of the artists represented - for example Rops, Whistler and Zorn - were not French by birth, but gravitated to Paris at some stage in their careers and were profoundly influenced by the dynamic cultural ambience of that great city. Most of the prints fall between the dates 1862, when the Société des Aquafortistes was founded, and 1910 around which time German Expressionism took the spotlight from French print-making. Robin Morrison from the Road Closes August
2 Outreach Anyone, professional or novice, who is interested in taking up a hobby, art, craft or cultural activity, whether by joining an organised class or simply using the facilities on a casual basis, can hire the Centre. Groups may also use Outreach for conferences, lectures or informal 'get-togethers'. Gifts The Gallery was recently fortunate enough to be presented with four works by Colin McCahon.
Three works were presented
by the artist:
We thank Mr McCahon and Mrs Auburn for their generosity. Commencing with the D'Oggiono, these three paintings will be featured in the Gallery successively during the period from July to September. look for them on the First Floor near the entrance to the Coffee Shop.
Recent Acquisitions William Blake Engraved
Illustrations to 'The Book of Job' The unique position Blake's engraved job holds is explained in the words of Arthur M. Hind: 'in the beauty and harmony of its design and in the purity of its cutting, as free from convention as it is unimpeachable in method, it is one of the most remarkable works in the later history of line engraving.'
Blake identified closely with the spiritual fortunes and misfortunes of Job, the greatest of all men of the East, whose faith was tested in the extreme. But Blake re-interpreted the Old Testament story to give a less arbitrary reason for Job's sufferings. Blake was opposed to the notion of an omnipotent God who punishes sins and holds sway over man's destiny. In the engraved illustrations Job's sufferings must be seen as emotional and spiritual confusion resulting from his erroneous conception of God and concentration on the observance rather than the spirit of religion. The complete drama is highly symbolic and should not be interpreted literally, but seen as enacted in Job's soul. Blake wrote of the elaborate symbolism of those engraved illustrations 'I entreat, then, that the spectator will attend to the hands and feet, the lineaments of the countenances; they are all descriptive of character and not a line is drawn without intention, and that most discriminate and particular.' EDWARD CALVERT The Brook Calvert is an unusual figure in that he only made eleven prints in all, seven of which are wood engravings. But they are all charged with an intense spiritual and poetic quality which is well expressed by the words Calvert himself used to describe Blake's Virgil wood engravings: 'They are done as if by a child.... yet there is a spirit in them, humble enough and of force enough to move simple souls to tears.'
Calvert was a sailor until the age of twenty-five; yet his subjects are pastoral: arcadian and peopled with idealized neo-classical figures. He based his wood engravings on the pastoral surroundings of Shoreham - where Samuel Palmer lived and where Calvert visited him -with its rounded hills and thatched cottages. His prints date from 1827 to 1831 and, in the absence of evidence of previous experience in the medium, indicate an immediate maturity. After completing his finest print, The Chamber Idyll 1831, his 'swan song', he never touched an engraving tool again, but spent the remaining fifty years of his life painting arcadian and pagan subjects with little inspiration. AUGUSTE RODIN Victor Hugo, Front View 1885 Rodin first met Victor Hugo in 1883, two years before the writer's death at eighty-two. According to Edmond de Goncourt, Rodin 'went on for a long time about his bust of Hugo, who did not pose but who let him come to him as often as he wished. He made a stack of sketches of the great poet - I think sixty -from the right, the left, and above, almost all foreshortened, in attitudes of reading or meditation, sketches from which he was obliged to make the bust.'
It appears Rodin looked up to the bust set on a table. In both the present drypoint and the three-quarters view of Hugo, the viewpoint is from below. The former drypoint was worked byRodin through nine different states, the latter through eight. All convey a remarkable sense of the majesty of the man. In Rodin's own words 'Hugo had the air of a Hercules; belonged to a great race. Something of a tiger or an old lion. He had an immense animal nature. His eyes were splendidly beautiful and the most striking thing about him.' President's Annual Report: abstracts The Associates' fortunes traditionally reflect those of the Gallery. With increased activity, starting with the Len Lye exhibition through the Thyssen-Bornernisza & Icon, Inspired Art to the appointment of Dr Rodney Wilson as Director, there has been a steady increase in membership - from 489 in August last year to 792 this May. it is good to see interest in the Gallery and its support arm reviving with the new sense of purpose which Rodney Wilson has brought to the Gallery. The Committee have discussed with the Director how best the Associates can help the Gallery. He has suggested that the Associates' best contribution would be towards publications, such as this newsletter. The Committee has therefore doubled its contribution to Gallery publications & should consider further contributions in future. There is still a place for picture purchase but the scope is less with the general increase in prices. The Committee is glad for the Associates to be co-hosts with the Gallery at exhibition openings - a subtle change, maybe, but a form of recognition which has eluded us for many years. In the Associates' revised programme printed above there is, regrettably, no 'hot pot', which was such a success last year. Building alterations restrict the areas where food may be served & therefore the type of food that can be offered. Hopefully, we shall have this problem under control this time next year when we should have our own club room. Reproductions of six of the works by New Zealand artists which the Associates have presented to the Gallery were published as a calendar. Whilst this did not receive the support we would have wished it is, nevertheless ' a good quality publication, reminding viewers of works which are of necessity only displayed occasionally but which were valuable additions to the Gallery's collection. The Committee is a hard-working one and I wish to thank them for their support, cheerfulness & willingness to take on tasks when their days are more than full already. To avoid ranking, where there is none, I thank them in alphabetical order: Yvonne Chunn, particularly for her promotion of the calendars; Anne Cooper, a willing all-rounder; Liz Fumpston, half of the hard-working social committee & half of the purchasing advisory team with Pat Hanly; Pat Hanly, artist-in-residence & valuable contact person with artists and art adviser; Teddy Henderson, conscientious & energetic Treasurer; Ann Ibbertson, able arranger of our programme, an often daunting task; Nancy Jordan, our representative on the Board of Management; Marie Kirby, our Secretary, coping admirably with an increasing work load; Joceylyn Lowe, Social Convener & organiser of food & drink for all occasions & resource person par excellence; Brian Rowe, newcomer to the committee but a contributor with sage advice and practical work. John Poland resigned from the committee in March & Robin Wood, after four years, much as membership recorder, resigned in May 1981; their contributions to the common weal were appreciated. I also wish to
thank Councillor Cath Tizard for her genial support of the Associates, the Board
of Management for its support and Dr Rodney Wilson & all the Gallery staff
for making us feel part of the team that is putting a great Gallery back in its
rightful place. |