Goldie to Cottonopens at Auckland Art Gallery
Picturing
History: Goldie to Cottonopens at Auckland Art Gallery this
Saturday, 25 April. This free exhibition presents a
glimpse into our past through the eyes of some of our most
celebrated artists. Highlights from the gallery’s
extensive collection reveal how artists’ approach to
history has changed dramatically over time. Early artists
painted historical scenes in a grand and heroic manner,
often more concerned with imagination than fact. Goldie
and Steele’sThe Arrival of the Maoris (above) is New
Zealand’s most famous and infamous painting. Based on
Géricault’sRaft of the Medusa, the scene of starving
voyagers sighting land is riddled with inaccuracies. But it
struck a chord with colonists who knew the fears and
aspirations of journeying to a new land. In contrast,
recent artists have taken a more personal approach, in their
own poetic styles. Shane Cotton says while history may be a
starting point for his paintings, it is never an end
point. New Zealand’s history has provided fertile ground
for artists. The exhibition includes a focus on the 1886 Mt
Tarawera eruption for the first time since the centenary
show. Charles Blomfield’s paintings of the destruction
of the famous pink and white terraces are shown alongside
Charles Goldie, Gottfried Lindauer and Kennett Watkins’
portrayals of the heroes and myths of the tragedy. The
exhibition also features one of the most significant albums
of late 19th century New Zealand photography, the Burton
Brothers’Wonderland Album.
The Tarawera eruption was
good business for Alfred Burton, who travelled the country
showing by limelight his photos of the area before and after
the explosion. The album of 180 prints is being shown for
the first time since it was acquired by the gallery in
1999. Land and our relationship with it has long been an
obsession of New Zealand artists. Some have searched for an
untouched wilderness, while others such as Colin McCahon and
Doris Lusk, capture the transformation of the land. This
exhibition shows how the histories we tell reflect our own
time, place and cultural perspective. Auckland Art
Gallery’s historic main building is closed for development
until 2011. We remain open in the New Gallery on the corner
of Wellesley and Lorne
Sts. ends
<