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Two Wellington Entrepreneurs of
the 'Thirties ANN CALHOUN When he died in 1933, Edwin Murray Fuller was said to have had 'a will to succeed as an art dealer, or distributor of art, a title more in keeping with his temperament'. The same could certainly be said of his wife Mary. For a quarter of a century, from 1920 to 1945, these two were key figures in the artistic life of Wellington. Murray Fuller established one of the first galleries in New Zealand dealing in local art.1 The Murray Fullers together brought six exhibitions, of the order of two thousand works, of 'contemporary' British art to this country. Exhibitions in 1928,1930 and 1932 were credited to Murray Fuller. Mrs Fuller organised exhibitions in 1935, 1936 and 1940. Associated with these pursuits, both were, at different times, on the Council of The New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts in Wellington; with Mrs Fuller on the Committee of Management of the National Art Gallery.
The Murray Fullers sought to educate New Zealand artists and art audiences by offering the work of 'eminent' artists, albeit academic, from 'Home'. Like others they felt that a national artistic style and appreciation would only develop in the desired way if artists here and the hoped for growing number of patrons came into contact with the work of British or European trained artists. Born in Wellington in 1892, Murray Fuller was educated at Mount Cook School and the Wellington Technical School of Art.2 Murray Fuller's lifetime association with the Academy started in 1908, with an entry in the annual exhibition competition of a design for a catalogue cover. His name also appeared in the 1909 competitions (as did the name of his future wife Mary Hamilton - three years his elder); and in 1910, with later friends Nelson Isaacs (a future head of the School of Art and Academy Council member) and W.S. Wauchop, (a future vice-president and president of the Academy). As early as 1912, the dominance of the Academy in setting artistic tastes in
the Capital did not pass without objection. 140 works rejected for that year's
Annual Exhibition were displayed in a kind of Salon des Refuses at the McGregor
Wright Gallery. Writing in 1960, E.C. Simpson could still complain:
After leaving the Technical School, Murray Fuller worked as an artist first for John Ilott and then Charles Haines, advertising agents. Edwin Murray Fuller, 'Commercial Artist', and Mary Hamilton were married at the Wellington Registrar's Office on 19 March, 1913. During the First World War, Murray Fuller served in France, rising to the rank of sergeant. On 23 May, 1919, the Academy held a special evening for five returned soldier artists: Nugent Welch, Archibald F. Nicoll, Esmond Atkindon, E. Murray Fuller and W.H. Carter, Jnr. The previous year, four of Murray Fuller's works appeared in the Academy annual exhibition and, thereafter, in subsequent years. His medium seems always to have been watercolour with titles evocative of exotic places - Cape Town, Paignton and Armentieres, and later Venice and Zanzibar; his other subjects, starting with the 1918 exhibition, were often urban, a relatively modern area of interest. The 1920 annual exhibition catalogue illustrated one of his watercolours in that year's exhibition, Featherston Street (Wellington). He was said to be 'out after truth all the time', a catch phrase much used when an artist's efforts were felt to be directed correctly. Murray Fuller was first listed as an artist member of the Academy for the 1918 - 19 membership year, and then for every year until his death. In August 1920, he was elected to the Council of the Academy and retained this position of influence until August 1926, when he nominated W.S. Wauchop for a Council position. (Mary Fuller became a subscribing member of the Academy in 1920 but she did not achieve direct political power within the Academy until she became a member of the Academy Council after her husband's death.) In 1920 Murray Fuller established his gallery dealing in New Zealand art. An
announcement for the gallery appeared in the 1920 Academy annual exhibition
catalogue, opposite the illustration of Featherston Street. The artists he was to represent were then listed. A virtually identical list
appeared in an advertisement in The New Zealand Times of 30 October,
1920: The Murray Fuller Gallery changed its address four times in five years. By September 1921, it had moved from Willis Street to Vickers House at the corner of Woodward Street and The Terrace'(Entrance opposite Wellington Club)'. Under the heading 'Start of a New Zealand school', The New Zealand Times of 1 December, 1921, claimed that New Zealand artists had 'found a focus in the permanent gallery of New Zealand art, maintained in Wellington, by Mr. E. Murray Fuller, whose enthusiasm is doing good service for "the cause".' An advertisement for the gallery, appearing in the Academy annual exhibition catalogue, urged the 'purchasing of New Zealand Artists' work's as 'a wise policy, as evidenced by prices obtained now at Exhibitions compared with the value of pictures purchased quite recently'. In September 1922, the address was 190 Lambton Quay, '(Exactly opposite Midland Hotel)'. The business, in 1923, had expanded to include 'England's most prominent exhibitors. Among the watercolours to arrive shortly are ten by S.J. Lamorna Birch, R.W.S., who has an international reputation'. Between late 1923 and September 1924, the gallery moved to 236 Lambton Quay and was still there in September 1925.
Lecturing on 'Art in New Zealand', at the Trades Hall under the auspices of
the Workers' Educational Association, in October 1921, Murray Fuller observed: Individual contributions by Van der Velden and Nairn had meant that this country's artists were not as far behind the desired goal as they might have been. Nairn had been a ' "Messiah of art" . . . who brought all the great traditions of Europe first-hand to the Dominion.' The key, it was seen, was experience of European (in fact British) artistic practice. In an interview in 1922 with The New Zealand Times, Nelson Isaacs, a La Trobe scheme recruit, stated that as secretary of several Royal College of Art societies he had had the good fortune to meet distinguished artists such as Sir William Orpen, Augustus John, Muirhead Bone, Eric Kennington, George Clausen, Francis Dodd and William Rothenstein, who had said that they would willingly lend 'drawings' for exhibit in New Zealand: 'all had evinced warm and keen interest in this, the most English of the British Dominions'. This basic analysis of the means to establish a national aesthetic did not quickly change, and in a 1932 speech: 'Mr Isaac emphasised the necessity for art continually to reassert a sense of the past in order to preserve a sense of proportion'. W.S. Wauchop, in his Reminiscences, delivered to the Academy on the occasion of his retirement in 1964, recalled that after he came to live in Wellington in 1924 the Murray Fullers were quick to include him in the local art scene. Social functions were given for W. Menzies Gibb, Sydney Thompson and 'Archie' Nicoll and at the homes of Nugent Welsh and Nelson Isaacs. 'We all threw parties for Christopher Perkins, when he came from London to join the staff of the Technical College School of Art.' Charades were popular; and when fund raising for the National Gallery was a priority and evenings and fancy-dress dances were held in the Whitmore Street gallery, 'prominent among the organisers [were] Mr and Mrs Murray Fuller'. The Murray Fullers travelled to Australia, England and the Continent, starting in late 1926 or 1927, for the express purpose of gathering works of art for exhibition in New Zealand. E.H. McCormick in The Expatriate records that a dealer, '(presumably Mr Murray Fuller)', called on Frances Hodgkins in Concarneau and took five drawings for possible sale in Australia.4 Two of her watercolours, Ebbing Tide, Concameau and From a French Window were offered at 25 guineas each in the 1928 E. Murray Fuller exhibition. In 1928, 1930, 1932 and 1935, E. Murray Fuller exhibitions of 'contemporary'
British art were shown in the Academy's Whitmore Street gallery. Intended as,
mini-Royal Academies, they were educative in purpose, the correct grounding in
art appreciation being exposure to the best work from 'Home' as dictated by the
arbiter of fashionable taste, the Royal Academy. The New Zealand Academy of Fine
Arts in Wellington had stated its position in the 1918 Annual Exhibition
catalogue: The Academy had suggested the frame within which the viewer should approach a work of art, so that the twin academic ideals of moral purpose or educational value and beauty should be apprehended. By the time of the E. Murray Fuller exhibitions, the exponents of
impressionism in England, broadly represented by the New English Art Club
(NEAC), now numbered among the ranks of the Royal Academy. The process which has
been aptly called 'the domestication of French Impressionism without prejudice
to the native tradition' had long since been completed.5 Artists whose names
were associated with the NEAC for some part of their careers first appeared in
the 1932 Murray Fuller exhibition. Some were there as much or more for their
R.A. membership - Richard Sickert (also a member of the London Group), Sir
George Clausen, Augustus John, Philip Connard. Sir William Orpen first appeared
in the 1930 exhibition. The 1932 exhibition did, however, include NEAC members
such as P. Wilson Steer, Ethel Walker, Beatrice Bland, Sir CJ.. Holmes, Charles
Cundall and Muirhead Bone. In his Prefactory Notice to the 1932 catalogue, A.D.
Carbery explained:
The London Group, formed in 1913 from a number of groups dissatisfied with the increasingly academic outlook of the NEAC, had itself by 1932 sufficient respectability to be mentioned by Carbery in his introduction, and three members, Henry Lamb, Mark Gertler and C. R.W. Nevison, had work included in the exhibition.6 The Murray Fuller exhibitions were described as an 'unimpeachable source'
from which to purchase works of art, and were compared in this respect to the
exhibition of British art brought out to New Zealand in 1912 by John Baillie, in
consultation with George Clausen, R.A. The 'eminent' artists included in the
Baillie exhibition were cited in the 1938 Academy 50th annual exhibition
catalogue: Of the fifteen names listed from the 1912 exhibition, eight appeared in Murray Fuller exhibitions. All four Murray Fuller exhibitions included 'Original Paintings in Oil and Water Colour, also Etchings by Britain's most eminent painters and etchers'. The emphasis on etchings does seem to reflect a personal Murray Fuller enthusiasm. It could also have arisen from the new wave of interest in prints that had taken place with the increase of a monied middle-class during the 'twenties .7 Murray Fuller seemed to have understood and been able to capitalize on such market forces. His abilities in this respect led the Academy, as 'an experiment', to ask him to 'take charge of sales at the Annual Exhibition. Sales rose by over fifty percent thanks to his excellent salesmanship'. The 1928 exhibition of 240 works was seen in Wellington from the 13th to the
26th April and then in Christchurch.8 In his Foreword, A.D. Carbery,
vicepresident of the Academy, focused on Murray Fuller's personal contact with
the artists involved, an often repeated aspect of the Murray Fuller exhibitions: While guidance from 'Home', through the work on display, would lead, thought Carbery, to a 'betterment in our standards of taste', W.H. Alien asked art societies to purchase modern work 'instead of confining their patronage abroad to the efforts of the "safer" and older academicians', and Christopher Perkins had noted, when reviewing the 1930 Academy Annual Exhibition: 'The vice-president's alternative use of the terms Academic and Victorian' showing 'that the Academic person is, or wishes to be thought, old-fashioned'.
From the 1928 exhibition, the Academy acquired Arnesby Brown's Autumn, an oil (250 guineas); Harold Speed's May Morning, an oil (175 guineas) and, although not listed in the catalogue, W. Lee Hankey's The Right of Way, a watercolour, would have been obtained from the E. Murray Fuller exhibition. The second Exhibition of 199 works of 'Contemporary British Art' opened on 7
February, 1930. Murray Fuller is acclaimed: An Orpen drawing The Breeze (65 guineas) was presented to the Academy, who purchased Silver and Blue, Pas de Calais, an oil, by Algernon Talmage, R.A. (250 guineas). Two works listed in the 1930 catalogue were 'Not for Sale', both by 'The Late H.H. La Thangue, R.A. (Recovered from the wreck of the S.S. "Manuka")'. This referred to the loss of a 'Murray Fuller Collection', valued according to one source at £80,000 and at £25,000 in another source; and it accounts for Mrs Fuller's claim in 1941 that the Murray Fullers had brought seven and not the six exhibitions discussed to New Zealand. Undeterred by the disaster, the 1932 show, taking two and a half years to
collect ' was Murray Fuller's most successful. The accolades were impressive.
Opening the exhibition at the Academy gallery on 26 February, 1932:
After discussing aspects of the exhibition raised by Carbery in his Prefatory
Notice, referred to earlier, he claimed that: It was also observed that Mr Murray Fuller had been a close friend of the late Sir William Orpen and the inclusion of three works by Orpen sent at the express wish of the artist on the eve of his death was repeatedly referred to as a stamp of excellence on the exhibition. One of these, Apres le Bain, Dieppe (700 guineas) was said to have been the final self-portrait by the artist. The Academy purchased Silver Sea, Irish Coast, an oil by Julius Olsson (65 guineas). The local press in an item from London noted: After Wellington, the exhibition opened in Dunedin on 15 April, 1932, where the Orpen self-portrait was purchased for the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. It opened in Christchurch on 17 May, 1932 and it was intended that the exhibition then be toured in Australia. Before leaving Wellington, Murray Fuller had treated a luncheon audience at
the Wellington Rotary Club to anecdotes about 'eminent British painters' he
personally had known: Other names mentioned were Harold and Dame Laura Knight, Arnesby Brown, Julius Olsson, S.J. Lamorna Birch and W.E. Webster. Discussing the exhibition in Christchurch with a reporter, Murray Fuller
said: Murray Fuller went on to report on a conversation he had had with Augustus John before leaving England. John felt that Norman Lindsay, the Australian artist, 'would have shown better draughtsmanship if he had had a European training'. Of what he called the 'ultra-modern school', Murray Fuller said that they were 'exciting attention' and the Royal Academy were hanging 'some very modern pictures', although they were being hung separately. 'It was likely, said Mr Fuller, that the modernists of today would not be considered in the least extreme by the coming generation'.
E. Murray Fuller died on 25 February, 1933, aged 41. In his memory, the
Academy purchased a watercolour, Market Place in Zanzibar, 1931, at its Autumn
Exhibition. The work had been 'hung on the line at the annual exhibition of the
Royal Institute of Water Colours in London'. On 7 March, a well-attended funeral
service was held in Saint Paul's Cathedral, Wellington. The pall-bearers were
Nelson Isaacs, W.S. Wauchop and Nugent Welch. In 'An Appreciation', published in
the Dominion on 28 February, 1933, 'By Brother Artists', his friends described
Murray Fuller as: But for fate, he would have, they said: 1. Gordon H. Brown, New Zealand
Painting 1920-1940, Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council of New Zealand,
Wellington, 1975, p.29
I would like to acknowledge with thanks the following assistance and sources used in preparing this essay: The staff and facilities of the National Art Gallery, Wellington, Cordon H.
Brown, Art in New Zealand, The New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts annual reports
and annual exhibition catalogues, E. Murray Fuller exhibition catalogues, The
Alexander Turnbull Library and the Evening Post files. |