Ten Big Paintings was a 1971 art exhibition developed by the Auckland City Art Gallery (now known as Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki) which toured throughout New Zealand.[1]
History
editIn May 1969, in anticipation of the opening of the new Edmiston Wing[2] at the Auckland Art Gallery, Hamish Keith and the staff developed the concept for an exhibition of large paintings on canvas.[3] Ten Big Paintings was commissioned by Keith who was the gallery's Keeper of Collections.[4] There was a recognition at the time that the scale of painting in New Zealand was small compared to contemporary painting overseas. The Museum of Modern Art had an exhibition Large-scale Modern Painting devoted to the idea as far back as 1947.[5] Keith had been impressed by Colin McCahon painting the large-scale Northland Panels on his return from a visit to the United States in 1958.[6] The painter Ross Ritchie, who was also working at the gallery, had experience of painting billboards and was familiar with the established size for these works as being 10 x 20 feet (3.1 x 6.1 meters).[7] This then was the size selected for the five part stretcher mounted canvases that were sent out to the artists and, as the gallery director Gill Docking noted in the catalogue introduction, ‘Each painter was left with complete autonomy over their work but was given a chance to do something which, under normal circumstances, could be uneconomic.’[8] The exhibition was opened at the Auckland Art Gallery by Princess Alexandra on the 9 February[9] and ran to 28 March after which it toured to Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin. The paintings were literally too big for the National Art Gallery in Wellington and were shown next door at the Academy of Fine Arts[10] and too large also for the Robert McDougall Art Gallery where part of the exhibition was shown at the Canterbury Society of Arts Gallery.[11]
The artists and the paintings
editDon Driver Five Part Work. The painting was gifted to the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery by Driver in 1973[12] Driver also painted a smaller version of the work Dimension No 6 that is in the collection of Te Manawa in Palmerston North.[13]
Michael Eaton Untitled 1970–71. Unlike the other painters Eaton turned the four units of the large canvas on their sides to create an elongated landscape 5 x 40 feet (1.5 x 12.2 meters)
Robert Ellis Journey. Art critic Hamish Keith described Ellis's painting as, ‘expanding the image of megalomaniacal roading to a planetary scale, and out of it [making] a powerful and dynamic image of intersecting thousand lane motorways against a richly mosaic surface.’[14]
Pat Hanly Whence come we? What are we? Whither go we? Hanly was unhappy with his painting and on its return from the Ten Big Paintings exhibition, separated the three panels and painted over his work using one of the panels as a large kite.[15]
Ralph Hotere February May and the Birds of Ice the Moon Drowns in its Voice of Water. Hotere's painting was purchased by the Dunedin Public Art Gallery in 1974.[16]
Colin McCahon Gate III. McCahon painted this work at the Auckland University Art School where he was still teaching.[17] In 1972 historian Tim Beaglehole arranged the purchase of Gate III for Victoria University.[18] The purchase was made via McCahon's Wellington dealer Peter McLeavey at a cost of $4,000.[19]
Milan Mrkusich Untitled. Like many of the other artists in the exhibition Mrkusich's studio was too small to accommodate even one of the four panels. Instead each panel was painted individually in the family's lounge, Mrkusich having first removed all the furniture.[20]
Don Peebles Painting 1970. Peebles and Michael Eaton were the only two South Island artists included in the exhibition.[9]
Ross Ritchie Inch. Art critic T. J. McNamara said of Ritchie's work that it, ‘…dances lines around the canvas in glowing colours and happy areas of paint advance and recede in a delightful fashion. The picture goes a long way toward fulfilling the promise Ross Ritchie has shown in recent years.’[21]
Wong Sing Tai Dedicated to Amoghasiddhi. When the exhibition showed at the National Art Gallery in Wellington (now Te Papa Tongarewa) the photographer Ans Westra took a number of images of the works including the painting by Wong Sing Tai.[22] At 28 Sing Tai was the youngest of the artists chosen.
Big paintings
editPrior to the exhibition, the biggest painting on canvas or board in New Zealand was almost certainly Colin McCahon's Practical Religion, at just under 17 square metres.[23] McCahon himself once referred to it as a ‘monster’.[24] Before this was painted the biggest painting on canvas in the country was Frank Brangwyn’s 7.7 sq.m. The Card Players: Agricultural Workers at Rest[25] at the National Gallery in Wellington. At the Auckland Art Gallery The Arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand,[26] C F Goldie and John Louis Steele’s version of Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa was a wall-filling 4.9 sq.m., but tiny compared to the Géricault original (35 sq.m.).[27]
In terms of modern painting the average size of works in the Ten Big Paintings exhibition was 18.91 sq.m. with McCahon's Gate III at 32.5 sq.m. This made the McCahon work a good deal larger than Picasso’s Guernica (27.3 sq.m.) but well shy of James Rosenquist's F-111,[28] (80 sq.m.).
References
edit- ^ "Ten Big Paintings" (PDF). AGMANZ News. 2 (8): 7. February 1971.
- ^ "Major Projects". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Ten Big Paintings". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ Keith, Hamish (2008). Native Wit. Random House. p. 233. ISBN 9781869418434.
- ^ "Large-Scale Modern Paintings". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ Brown, Gordon H. (1984). Colin McCahon: Artist. AH & AW Reed. pp. 92–94. ISBN 0589014862.
- ^ Hanfling, Edward (Winter 2017). "Inside the Engine Room: A conversation with Edward Hanfling". Art New Zealand (162).
- ^ "Ten Big Paintings" (PDF). Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ a b "Gallery has big plans". Press (Christchurch). 2 February 1971. p. 13.
- ^ James, Judith (29 July 1971). "Big Art Comes to the Capital". The Dominion.
- ^ "Ten Big Paintings". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Five Art Piece". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Dimension No 6". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ Keith, Hamish (February 1971). "Gallery's Gamble Paid Off: 7 Hits out of 10". Auckland Star.
- ^ Hayley, Russell (1989). Hanly: a New Zealand Artist. Hodder and Stoughton. p. 167. ISBN 0340431296.
- ^ "February May and the Birds of Ice the Moon Drowns in its Voices of Water". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ Bloem, Marja; Browne, Martin; McCahon, Colin; Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, eds. (2002). Colin McCahon. a question of faith: Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, 30 August - 10 November 2002 ... Nelson: Potton [u.a.] p. 215. ISBN 978-0-908802-91-3.
- ^ Victoria’s Art: A University Collection. Adam Art Gallery for Victoria University. 2005. p. 17. ISBN 1877309052.
- ^ "Highest Price for a NZ Painting". Evening Post. 19 September 1972. p. 7.
- ^ Wright, Alan; Hanfling, Edward (2009). Mrkusich: The Art of Transformation. Auckland University Press. p. 78. ISBN 9781869404376.
- ^ McNamara, T.J. (11 February 1971). "Ten Big Paintings: Masterly Work at City Gallery". New Zealand Herald.
- ^ "'Big Paintings' exhibition by New Zealand artists at the National Art Gallery". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Practical religion: the resurrection of Lazarus showing Mount Martha, 1969". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ Colin McCahon / a survey exhibition. Auckland Art Gallery. 1972. p. 37.
- ^ "The card players: agricultural workers at rest". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "The Arrival of the Māoris in New Zealand". Retrieved 23 September 2023.
- ^ "Raft of the Medusa". Retrieved 24 September 2023.
- ^ "F111". Retrieved 24 September 2023.