IN CONVERSATION
ANN ROBINSON ONZM
International Art Centre is delighted to host world-renowned cast glass artist Ann Robinson. Join us at 11am on Wednesday, 1 May at our Parnell premises to hear Ann discuss her inspiring career that spans over 40 years.
An opportunity to view the Women in Art auction, including a selection of Ann Robinson’s works will follow the event. RSVP
auctions@artcntr.co.nz
WEDNESDAY 1 MAY 11AM Lot
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+64 9 379 4010 EVENT
35 Ann Robinson Spore - Lime Green 2014
Lot 75 Maud Sherwood
The Camping Ground at Dee-Why, NSW
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Directors Richard Thomson & Frances Davies
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Ph: +64 9 379 4010 Toll Free 0800 800 322
www.internationalartcentre.co.nz
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1 PAULINE YEARBURY (1926 - 77)
St Francis, Tobias and Friends
Incised Wood Panel 60 x 22
Signed $2,000 - 3,000
PROVENANCE Private Collection, acquired from the artist
2 PAULINE YEARBURY (1926 - 77)
Wake up Saint Francis
Incised Wood Panel 60.5 x 22.5
Signed $2,000 - 3,000
PROVENANCE Private Collection, acquired from the artist
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Untitled
Watercolour 34 x 27
$4,000 - 6,000
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Auckland, acquired from the artist by descent
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3 A. LOIS WHITE (1903 - 84)
4 A. LOIS WHITE (1903 - 84)
Untitled
Watercolour 29 x 21.5
$4,000 - 6,000
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Auckland, acquired from the artist by descent
5
MARGUERITE COTTON (1912 - 97)
Rhythm
Gouache 36.5 x 115.5
Signed & dated 1934
$1,500 - 2,500
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By the mid-20th century, there was strong institutional fixation on emerging modernism and landscape art in New Zealand. It is therefore not surprising that Anna Lois White found herself marginalised by the art world throughout her career. Despite the knowledge that her work did not align to institutional tastes or trends, White pursued an individual tradition of classically-inspired symbolism integrating allegorical, art historical, biblical and political concerns. In the 1940s, given the limited materials available during wartime, White had to abandon the large-scale compositions in oil that had dominated her output in the previous decade. She began working on a smaller scale, primarily in watercolour as can be seen in the works illustrated in this catalogue.
A contemporary of White’s, Marguerite Parson (neé Cotton) skillfully preserved moments of time in works of illustrative vibrancy bursting with life as illustrated in Rhythm. Born in Waipori in 1912 Cotton was the only daughter of four. She attended the Canterbury College of Art and in her second year, exhibited in the Academy of Fine Arts 1934 exhibition. 1935 saw Cotton gain a New Zealand Diploma of Fine Arts, being only one of two students to achieve
this in the country. Following her return to Dunedin she enrolled in the night classes being offered at King Edward Technical College. Alongside fellow pupils Anne Hamblett and Doris Lusk, Cotton received a first class pass in both Modelling and Life Drawing.
Early examples of her illustrative style can be seen in the University of Otago’s Capping Book, adorning the 1939 cover. She also illustrated and wrote a children’s colouring book, The Adventure Painting Book. In April 1940, at the onset of the second world war, Cotton wrote to both Major-General Duigan and the Minister of Defence Hon. F Jones, offering her services as a War Artist. Could you and your Defence Council arrange to send me to be New Zealand’s pictorial historian of the day as far as illustrating war events is concerned? I have particularly good health and to live in a uniform in trenches or sleep in a sleeping bag and live on army rations would be an adventure. Women were not considered for the role of War Artist, however like many other female artists during this period, Cotton produced works reflecting the society of the time, such as her 1941 work NZ Industry in Wartime.
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6
Nude
Oil pastel on paper 68.5 x 44.5
Signed
$3,000 - 5,000
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Auckland
7 A. LOIS
84)
Nativity - Study for Birth of Christ
Watercolour 41.5 x 56
$8,000 - 12,000
PROVENANCE
Private Collection, Auckland, acquired from the artist by descent
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A. LOIS WHITE (1903 - 84)
WHITE (1903 -
18 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
8 EILEEN MAYO (English 1906 - 94)
Rain, Coal & Wood 1977
Relief print, Artists proof II, 35.5 x 54.5
Signed & inscribed
$4,000 - 6,000
9 DORA WILSON (Australian, British 1883 - 1946)
St Francis’ Old Cathedral c.1944
Oil on canvas on board 33 x 40
Signed
$8,000 - 12,000
10 DORIS CLARE ZINKEISEN (Scottish 1897 - 1991)
Dancer’s Revels
Oil on board 50 x 60
Signed & dated 1967 verso
$4,000 - 6,000
Doris Zinkeisen was a Scottish theatrical stage and costume designer, painter, commercial artist and writer.
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11 MARTI FRIEDLANDER (1928 - 2016)
Louise Henderson Studio, 1975
Gelatin silver print
39 x 28.5
Inscribed verso
$4,500 - 8,500
Marti Friedlander was one of the most important photographers of twentieth-century New Zealand. In the 1960s and 1970s her work was included in numerous publications, including the New Zealand Herald, the New Zealand Listener and Art New Zealand. It was during this time that she captured the image, Louise Henderson Studio. This portrait depicts Louise Henderson, now known as one of New Zealand’s leading twentieth-century abstract artists, seated directly in the middle of the composition, dressed all in white against an immaterial black background. This emotive, monochromatic capture of an enigmatic subject is characteristic of Friedlander’s style. This is evident too in her iconic image, Eglinton Valley. Here, Friedlander depicts a ubiquitous New Zealand symbol, the sheep. The band of sheep stand close together, gazing warily out at the viewer as if questioning their presence. This is one of Friedlander’s best-known works and was used as the key image for her 2001 solo exhibition at the Auckland Art Gallery. In 1999 Friedlander was made a CNZM for services to photography, in 2011 an Arts Foundation Icon, and the University of Auckland granted her an honorary doctorate in 2016.
Ans Westra remains one of New Zealand’s best known social photographers. Born in the Netherlands in 1936, Westra moved to New Zealand in 1957. By 1962 she was working as a freelance photographer, and in 1964 the first book of her photographs was published. This collection of photographs, entitled Washday at the Pa drew great attention for Westra when it was removed from distribution by the government. It was during
this controversial time when the image Ruatoria, 1964 was captured. Not printed until 1985, this image pictures two Māori women standing proudly in the middle of a home interior. These women have closed eyes and open mouths and appear to be singing to the other women in the room. This scene elicits a joyous response, presenting female strength, support, and comfort. Westra has produced many books of photography throughout her career. In recognition for her work Westra was made a CNZM in 1998, in 2007 she became an Arts Foundation Icon, and in 2015 she received an honorary doctorate from Massey University.
Acclaimed photographer Adrienne Martyn was born in Wellington in 1950. At the age of 18 she moved to Dunedin to train with a commercial photographer. In 1975 her photographs illustrated Australian feminist Kate Jennings’ seminal work Mother I’m Rooted. Since this time, she has been the subject of numerous exhibitions and her work is held in a vast array of collections, including Auckland Art Gallery, Christchurch Art Gallery, and Te Papa. Martyn works across a wide range of subjects, including portraiture, architecture, landscape, and still-life. Her works are often black and white, and her portraits are intimate and thoughtful representations. This is evident in Portrait of Beatrice Grossman, where Martyn presents her female subject in a striking position of power within the picture plane. Dressed all in black with a plain white background, Grossman stands out as a monochromatic force of nature. Grossman was an Auckland Art dealer in the 1980’s. When viewed together, all of these photographic works capture the unique perspectives of female artists and allow us to celebrate their importance to New Zealand art history.
MIRABELLE FIELD
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12
MARTI FRIEDLANDER (1928 - 2016)
Eglinton Valley, 1970
Gelatin silver print 21 x 27.5
$5,000 - 8,000
13
ADRIENNE MARTYN (b. 1950)
Portrait of Beatrice Grossman
Gelatin silver print, 33.5 x 34
$1,000 - 2,000
14 ANS WESTRA (1936 - 2023)
Ruatoria 1964
Silver gelatin photograph (printed 1985) 28 x 28
Signed Ans Westra lower right (in artist’s hand)
$3,500 - 5,000
EXHIBITED
Witness to Change: Life in New Zealand (Photographs
1940-1965) City Gallery, 11
November - 8 December, 1985
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12
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15 EMILY KARAKA (b. 1952)
Tamaki Makaurau Collective
Deed of Settlement
Oil on hessian laid on board
122 x 76
$2,000 - 3,000
16 LORENE TAUREREWA (b. 1961)
Untitled
Watercolour 41 x 30.5
$1,200 - 2,200
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26 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
Life with
Tulips 2018 Inkjet on Epsom Archival Matte 189gsm, edition 1/100 17.5 x 23.5 Signed verso $2,000 - 4,000 18 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961)
- Figure in Doorway Silver gelatin print 16 x 16.3 $1,000 - 2,000
-
Figure with Cigarette Silver gelatin print 13.6 x 19.8
- 2,000
Maoriland)
inks on Hahnemuhle Photo Rag, edition 4/10
x 82.5
& dated 2019 verso
- 26,000 17 18 19
17 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961) Still
Laszlo’s Wilting
Untitled
19 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961) Untitled
Reclining
$1,000
20 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961) A60924 Tiki (Orphans of
Pigment
110
Signed
$18,000
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21 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961)
Portrait of a South Island Kokako, Extinct, 2016/2021 Pigment ink on Hahnemuhle Photo rag, edition of 9/10 109 x 144.5 Signed verso $25,000 -
35,000
22 FIONA PARDINGTON (b. 1961)
Portrait of a Life Cast of Kakaley (painted), Solomon Islands, 2010 Inkjet print on Hahnemuhle paper, edition 4/10 110
x 81 Signed verso $25,000 - 35,000
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30 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
Evie
Acrylic on board 71 x 60
$8,000 - 12,000
EXHIBITED
OLGA, 2016
Evie was part of a series which featured characters from Home and Away – ‘Alf Stewart’ and ‘Drax’ were gifted to the Waikato Museum
Untitled, Yellow
Oil and acrylic on canvas 60 x 60
Signed & dated 2002 verso
$3,000 - 5,000
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23 AYESHA GREEN (b. 1987)
24 JUDY MILLAR (b. 1957)
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25 SAM MITCHELL (b. 1971)
Forget Me Knots
Acrylic on perspex 48.5 x 42.5
Inscribed I Should Be So Lucky
$5,000 - 7,000
26 HANNAH KIDD (b. 1979)
Everything is Awesome II
Ceramic glazes, steel, corrugated iron, mdf and paint 53.8 x 26.2
$3,500 - 5,500
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In contemplating the history of art in New Zealand, it would be difficult for The Group not to come to mind. Formed in Christchurch in the late-1920’s, The Group was an ever-evolving artist collective that exhibited for fifty years. Independence and autonomy were fundamental to its formation, in contrast to the conservatism of dominant exhibiting institutions of the era. The prior celebrated style was naturalistic, and traditional landscape painting reigned supreme.
It was against this backdrop that The Group developed a reputation for fostering both modernity and the unconventional in art. Without championing a specific style or subject, members were united in their flair for experimentation and enthusiasm in their work. Given this innovative spirit, it comes as no surprise that five of the original seven members were young women. By their third annual exhibition in 1929, the ratio of female artists grew to 7-2. As a collective that is largely attributed with shaping the New Zealand modernist movement, the depth of impact from female artists cannot be understated. The Group’s lasting significance is a testament to the women who established its very foundations.
Evelyn Page (1899-1988) was one of these founding artists. Her painting practice explored landscapes, figure and still-life studies that were characterised by lively brushwork and an expressive palette.
Travelling to Europe and Britain undoubtedly had an impact on her works, as with many other artists in The Group who were exposed to international movements like fauvism and cubism overseas.
Rita Angus painting Self portrait, 1936-1937, by Jean Bertram. Te Papa (CA000242/001/0002)
Young Woman in a Bay Window (1982), echoes Ingres’ The Valpinçon Bather, embracing a post-impressionistic painterly application whereby contrasting swathes of colour dance across the canvas in fluid strokes. Influences from abroad are also found throughout the works of French-born Louise Henderson (1902-94), who joined The Group in the early 1930’s. Paintings like Ponsonby Girls incorporate a cubist-like approach, whereby the figures are formed using fragmented features and angular brushwork.
A number of Page and Henderson’s contemporaries joined in subsequent years, each moving away from merely imitating reality in their paintings to develop their own distinctive styles. Many celebrated
34 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
female artists were involved in The Group across decades, such as Rita Angus (190870) who was a long-standing member from 1932 until the 1960’s. Angus, alongside other influential members Olivia SpencerBower (1905-82) and Rata Lovell-Smith (1894-1969), were amongst those leading the regionalist movement during the midcentury, often turning to landscape subjects in an array of approaches that captured local identity and a distinguishable sense of place. Spencer-Bower for example, was particularly known for her mastery of the watercolour medium. Her earlier works incorporate more naturalistic drawings of scenes around the Southern region, built up using thin washes of paint in a layered approach. She later developed a looser, more abstract painterly technique.
Untitled Landscape sits somewhere between the two, exemplifying the delicacy and subtle sense of movement that characterised her painting. In later years, contemporary artists such as Gretchen Albrecht (b.1943) made their own unique contributions to The Group and upheld the spaces that the women who came before them had carved out. A candid photograph taken by Olivia Spencer-Bower in 1936 pictures members of The Group in discussion, three of whom have paintings in hand, including Louise Henderson and Rata Lovell-Smith. Not only does the photograph capture the very spirit of the artist collective through the eyes of a female artist, but it proudly centres the contributing women who were integral to its formation and lasting influences.
MADELEINE GIFFORD
Included in this photograph, taken by Olivia Spencer Bower – herself a member of the group – are Rata Lovell-Smith (far left) and Louise Henderson (right). The woman wearing the beret is writer Ngaio Marsh, who also exhibited in the show. Others represented that year included Toss Woollaston and R. N. Field.
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OLIVIA SPENCER BOWER (1905-82) Untitled Landscape Watercolour 43.5 x 57 Signed $2,000 - 4,000
RATA LOVELL-SMITH (1894-1969) Track Through Scrub, Upper Waimakariri Canterbury Oil on board 35 x 44 Signed $2,000 - 4,000
RITA ANGUS
Island Bay, Wellington Pencil & crayon on paper 35.5 x 48 Signed $14,000 - 18,000 PROVENANCE Private Collection, Auckland Art+Object, Important Paintings and Contemporary Art, Auckland, 26/11/2013, Lot No. 34
27
28
29
(1908-70)
38 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
on canvas board 32 x 40.2
30 EVELYN PAGE (1899 - 1988) Still Life and Fruit Oil
Signed $35,000 - 45,000
Oil on canvas on board 75 x 51.2
in a Bay Window
dated Jan
verso
31 EVELYN PAGE (1899 - 1988) Young Woman in a Bay Window
Signed, inscribed Young Woman
&
1982
$135,000 - 165,000
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Over the course of her career, Evelyn Page painted many portraits - tender, inquisitive portrayals of family members, friends and contemporaries. Many of these works are noted for their directness and freedom of painted expression.
Born in 1899, Evelyn Margaret Polson was the youngest of seven children. Her parents John and Elizabeth Polson were straightlaced, “Victorian” as Evelyn described them. Although this was a strictly religious upbringing, she was encouraged to foster a love of music, art and writing from a young age. In 1915, 15-year-old Evelyn joined the Canterbury College School of Arts where her formal training began and she would remain until 1922. She quickly proved herself to be a talented student, receiving numerous accolades and prizes. This was of course a formative time for the young artist, who in addition to learning from teachers Margaret Stoddart, Leonard Booth and Cecil Kelly, forged a number of lifelong friendships and connections with her peers including Ngaio Marsh and Viola Macmillan Brown.
She became a member of the Canterbury Society of Arts in 1922. For a period after this, Page focused on music, studying piano with Ernest Empson. Awareness of this musical talent deepens an appreciation of her paintings, which have a musical sensitivity to them. Page’s affinity for finding rhythm in composition and colour gives many of her works a deep visual musicality. It was through Empson that she met Frederick Page. During 1936 her first solo exhibition was held at the Durham Street Gallery, Canterbury Society of Arts. The exhibition was a great success with
every work selling at the opening. Evelyn was one of the founding members of the New Zealand Society of Artists and taught part-time at Christchurch Girls’ School before joining Frederick in London in 1937. The period that followed was one of exceptional and prolific creative output for her. During this period, the couple built their network of friends and fellow artists in London, and travelled around Europe. Upon their return to New Zealand, Frederick and Evelyn married and settled in Governors Bay, where they lived for several years. They had two children, Sebastian and Anna.
Whilst living there, and over the course of a number of summer painting holidays (a tradition she maintained throughout her life), Evelyn mastered the pure treatment of colour in her work. After Frederick was appointed to set up the School of Music at Victoria University in 1945, the family moved to Wellington. Evelyn and the children lived in Pukerua Bay; she used to travel into the city to visit Frederick and to paint.
Her wonderfully expressive portraits of friends and peers, interior still lifes and cityscapes now stand out as a form of protest in response to mainstream modernism. The Pages returned to London and Evelyn attended a summer school in Salzburg. In the 1960s and 1970s, Page’s work assumed a quieter, more interior focus. Living in Waikanae and suffering from arthritis, a slower rhythm sustained her in the final decades of her work. She died in 1988. Page was a visionary, and her works possess a refreshing vivacity of spirit which have stood the test of time.
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Oil
Signed
$6,000 - 10,000
The
Watercolour
42.5 x 32 cm
Signed
$15,000 - 25,000
42 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
32 LOUISE HENDERSON (1902-94)
Ponsonby Girls
on board 37 x 32.5
33 LOUISE HENDERSON (1902-94)
Green Boat Shed
& gouache
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Orange Pod 1995
Cast glass, 1/1 25 x 34
Signed & dated 1995 on base
$20,000 - 30,000
Spore - Lime Green 2014
Cast glass, 45% crystal glass 1/1
51 x 34
Signed, inscribed & dated 2014 on base
$25,000 - 35,000
REFERENCE
The application of fern silhouettes onto the curved vase, with spore lines carved into the surface, was the first of a new series of works for the artist in 2014.
44 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
34 ANN ROBINSON (b. 1944)
35 ANN ROBINSON (b. 1944)
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36 STAR GOSSAGE (b. 1973)
Oi Boy
Oil and studio detritus on board
100 x 60
Signed, inscribed Oi Boy & dated 2008 - Pakiri verso
$24,000 - 28,000
Born in Otorohanga in 1973, Star Gossage was named for the whetū maramā, the star with five differently coloured points that sits above the crescent moon to symbolise the Ratana faith. Creativity was bred into her. Peter Gossage (1946-2016), her Pakehā father, worked as a scenic artist and graphic designer for TV2 during the 1960s. He met and married Josephine, known as Tilly, a descendant of Rahui Te Kiri Tenetahi (and also an artist), in a Ratana ceremony conducted in Herne Bay in 1971. Peter produced illustrated children’s books telling Māori stories at Tilly’s suggestion, instilling matauranga Māori into the imaginations of Star and their four other children, Marama, Ra, Tahu and Aroha, as well as a generation of other New Zealanders. Several of the Gossage siblings are artists, living on their ancestral Te Kiri land at Pakiri, north of Auckland. From the beach there, they look towards Te Hauturu-o-Toi (resting place of the wind) or Little Barrier Island, which was
once was home to Ngāti Manuhiri, Ngāti Rehua and Ngāti Wai before it was taken and made a nature reserve by the Crown in 1895.
Star’s works reverberate with the wairua or spirit of her Ngati Wai and Ngati Ruanui tupuna but also acknowledge her French, Portuguese, Spanish and English ancestry. She developed her practice at the School of Art in Dunedin where she studied in the early 1990s, mixing found materials such as lime and clay into house paints to build texture into her surfaces. Stylistically her figures resemble those of Dunedin’s Patricia France (1911-1995), an artist who was encouraged to begin painting in her mid-fifties to overcome the depression that had brought her to Ashburn Hall. Like Pat France, Star is influenced by the mysterious and evocative work of the French Symbolist painter Odilon Redon (1840-1916) and the surrealism of Russian-French artist Marc Chagall (1887-1985).
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37 STAR GOSSAGE (b. 1973)
Ao Tahi, First Light
Oil and studio detritus on board
80 x 120
Signed & dated 2009
Signed, inscribed Ao Tahi, First Light & dated August 2009 verso
$25,000 - 35,000
Female subjects predominate in both Gossage and France’s work, usually integrated with their environment, as the mother and child with the silhouetted manuka trees are here in the painting Ao Tahi (literally “first light” or dawn). Oi boy from 2008 is an exception, with a seated male figure dominating the composition, his expression dreamy and introspective as he holds a feather quill up in his left hand, seemingly untroubled by being shouted at.
Built into these works is mea tinana or the physical matter (detritus) from the studio at Pakiri which adheres to the surface. In this way, the works carry the materiality of where they were made out into the world, anchoring the paintings in the reality of lived experience. This counters the ethereal
appearance of the figures, achieved through thinning oil paint to suggest a dream or vision. Here are the artist’s own symbolic representations rather than literal depictions of Hinetitama (the goddess of the dawn) or distinct identities. Smudging and scrubbing away at the outlines of her forms, Star blends mother and child together, cloaking them in the golden light of dawn. The closeness of this matrilineal bond contrasts with the separateness of her male figure, the sky behind his head alight with inspiration. Sensibility suffuses these paintings, honouring gentleness and quiet, and balancing masculine and feminine qualities.
LINDA TYLER
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38
(b. 1943)
3 N.Y.C
Woodcut on paper, edition 1/10
15 x 30
Signed, inscribed & dated 1983
$4,000 - 6,000
39
(b. 1943)
Studies for Winged Spill
Watercolour 130 x 84
Signed, inscribed & dated 1974
$30,000 - 50,000
50 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024
GRETCHEN ALBRECHT
GRETCHEN ALBRECHT
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52 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024 40 JENNY DOLEZEL (b. 1964) The Sun Stolen A boxed Portfolio set of six different mezzotints on Rives BFK paper, edition 30/30, Printed by Artist 26 x 42 Signed, inscribed & dated 1992 $1,500 - 2,500
41 JENNY DOLEZEL (b. 1964)
In the Listening Room
Oil on canvas 83 x 120
Signed & dated 2000
$25,000 - 35,000
My painting In the Listening Room is an allegory in which reality blends with fiction and boundaries between humanity and nature become blurred - revealing the fragility of life and the complexity of relationships that are formed between beings.
The room in which the creatures inhabit - with it’s spatial ambiguity and playful toying with abstraction - provides an arena to embody one’s otherness, one’s uniqueness - to be heard. Being a good listener is one of the most important and enchanting life skills one can have. Here the room is saying those two, rare, magic words: ‘Go on’. Therefore, for
example, the higher, central plant-like form that grows from the yellow pot, is releasing it’s protective neck-brace - to flourish, while below, a red caped duck-like figure, unselfconsciously collects the introspective heads that float through the picture space, but with a net far too small.
Non-conformity, freedom and entertainment have always been active ingredients in my art, and here they seemed ever more relevant as I painted this when the new millennium dawned. To have the good fortune of being in the highly privileged position of managing all this on a few square metres of canvasespecially as a female artist (with paintings no longer relegated to having been painted by ‘Anonymous’) - there is nothing comparable to this.
JENNY DOLEZEL
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Squared off Muzzle
Gouache & pencil on paper
75 x 54.5
Signed, titled & inscribed verso
$6,000 - 8,000
Best Quality
Gouache and pencil on paper
76 x 56
Signed, titled & inscribed verso
$6,000 - 8,000
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42 KUSHANA BUSH (b. 1983)
43 KUSHANA BUSH (b. 1983)
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56 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024 44 45 46
44 HYE RIM LEE (b. 1963)
Legs Candyland
C-type photograph, edition of 2
45 x 45
$1,500 - 2,500
45 HYE RIM LEE (b. 1963)
Candyland 2006
C-type photograph, edition 3/5
70 x 70
Signed inscribed & dated verso
$3,500 - 6,500
46 SARA HUGHES (b. 1971)
Runway, 2000
Oil on canvas 58 x 58
Signed, inscribed & dated verso
$800 - 1,200
47 SARA HUGHES (b. 1971)
Melissa 2
Acrylic on linen 80 x 80
Signed, inscribed & dated 2005 verso
$6,000 - 10,000
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58 | Women in Art Wednesday 8 May 2024 48 49
48 GRETA ANDERSON (b. 1967)
White Swan, Lake Balaton, Hungary
Colour Photograph 2 18 x 25
$1,000 - 2,000
49 SUSANNE KERR (b. 1973)
Rhythm of Wind
Gouache on Hahnemuhle paper
50 x 40
Signed & dated 2020
$4,000 - 6,000
50 LORRAINE RASTORFER (b. 1961)
Schmecken (To Taste)
Acrylic on board 120 x 120
Signed & dated 2008
$7,000 - 10,000
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51 STAR GOSSAGE (b. 1973)
Four Sisters
Oil on board 34 x 17
Signed, inscribed & dated Pakiri
May 2006 verso
$3,000 - 5,000
52 GRETCHEN ALBRECHT (b.1943)
North Pole (London 4)
Oil on patinated copper 15 x 30
Signed & dated 2004 verso
$2,000 - 4,000
53 KATHRYN MADILL (b. 1951)
The Shiny World
Oil on gesso on board 32.5 x 51
Signed & dated 2003
$2,000 - 3,000
54 HARIATA ROPATA TANGAHOE (b. 1952)
Contemplation
Oil on board 37 x 29
Signed & dated 2008
$4,000 - 6,000
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| 61 53 54
Signed, inscribed & dated 2008 verso
$5,000 - 7,500
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55 TIRA WALSH (b. 1989)
Money Made Me Do It
Oil on canvas 154 x 114
Signed verso $3,000 - 5,000
56 HEATHER STRAKA (b. 1972)
Boating for Beginners Oil on linen laid onto board 15.5 x 30
57 FRANCIS UPRITCHARD (b. 1976)
Untitled Hockey stick, plastic, modelling material 108.5 x 55
Signed & dated 2004 $5,000 - 8,000
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58 JUDY MILLAR (b. 1957)
Untitled, 2007
Signed & dated verso
$4,000 - 6,000
59 AIKO ROBINSON (b. 1993)
Signed
60 HANNAH IRELAND (b. 1995)
Something Inbetween
Those Dilated Eyes
Watercolour & acrylic on glass
29.7 x 21
Signed, inscribed & dated
2023 verso
$2,000 - 3,000
EXHIBITED
Hannah Ireland, Running with Scissors, Te Uru Waitakere
Contemporary Gallery
12 August - 12 November 2023
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Oil and acrylic on paper 76 x 57
Colours of the Bedroom 6
Gouache, watercolour & ink on paper 74.2 x 52.7
$4,000 - 6,000
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61 PEATA LARKIN (b. 1973)
Whakataunga >V< Resolution (Papakirango)
Acrylic on mixed media
120.3 x 120
$8,000 - 10,000
62 JUDY MILLAR (b. 1957)
Untitled, 2005
Oil on canvas 102 x 71
Signed & dated 2005 verso
$3,500 - 5,500
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61 62
63
MADELEINE CHILD (b. 1959)
Caramel Corn
Ceramic & glaze, 6 parts 10 x 8
$400 - 800
64
HANNAH JENSEN (b. 1984)
Tulip
Carved Acrylic 90 x 65
Signed & dated 2008 verso
$5,000 - 8,000
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64
63
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| 69
media collage 75 x 75
- 4,500
65 TERESA LANE (b. 1970) Lamenting the Loss 2021 Mixed
$3,000
on board 48 x 31.5
& dated
verso
- 2,500
66 CANDI DENTICE Hybrid Oil
Signed
2005
$1,500
on canvas 120 x 90
- 4,500
67 VIKY GARDEN (b. 1961) Untitled Acrylic
Signed $2,500
box 57 x 56
- 8,000 68
68 PEATA LARKIN (b. 1973) Untitled Light
$6,000
69 ELVA BETT (1918 - 2016)
Piper
Screenprint 30.5 x 13.5
Signed, inscribed & dated 1963
$500 - 800
70
SARA HUGHES (b. 1971)
Scales of Economy
Screenprint on Fabriano paper
50.5 x 50.5
Signed, inscribed & dated 2008
$1,000 - 1,500
71 ROBIN WHITE (b. 1946)
On the Beach, Otago Peninsula
Screenprint, edition of 35
53.7 x 35.4
Signed, inscribed On the Beach, Otago Peninsula and dated October 1972
$6,000 - 10,000
In 1968, Elva Bett and her business partner Catherine Duncan opened the Bett-Duncan Gallery on Cuba Street, where they exhibited works of promising and established artists, and Bett held art classes.
Early exhibitions included pottery by Doreen Blumhardt and prints by Greer Twiss and Hamish Keith.
In 1976, Duncan left the gallery which subsequently became the Elva Bett Gallery. Art by emerging artists such as Tony Fomison, Philip Clairmont, Allen Maddox Rita Angus and Robin White were exhibited.
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70 69
| 71
A
Signed & dated 1983
$8,000 - 12,000
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72 ROBIN WHITE (b. 1946)
Beginner’s Guide to Gilbertise
Series of five woodcut prints & coversheet 17 x 21
73 FRANCES HODGKINS (1869 - 1947)
Pumpkins, 1952
Collotype, printed by Ganymed Press in 1952 50 x 70.5
Signed in plate
$3,000 - 6,000
74 MAUD SHERWOOD (1880 - 1956)
Still Life with Fuchsias
Watercolour 27.5 x 33
Signed
$1,500 - 2,500
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Signed
| 75
MAUD SHERWOOD (1880 - 1956)
Camping Ground at Dee-Why, NSW
44 x 54
$7,000 - 10,000
MAUD BURGE (1865-1957) Beach Scene Watercolour 29 x 37.5
$3,000 - 5,000
DOROTHY KATE RICHMOND (1861 - 1935)
the Land
24 x 34
&
- 2,500
DOROTHY KATE RICHMOND (1861 - 1935)
Watercolour 25.5 x 25
75
The
Watercolour
Signed
76
Signed
77
Ploughing
Watercolour
Signed
dated 1930 $1,500
78
Untitled, Gateway
& dsted
- 1,200 77
1927 $600
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79 HELEN STEWART (1900 - 83)
Still Life with Fruit
Watercolour & graphite on paper
28 x 35
$1,500 - 2,500
80 GWEN KNIGHT (1888 - 1974)
Untitled, Boats
Watercolour 36 x 47.5
Signed
$1,000 - 2,000
81 HELEN STEWART (1900 - 83)
Lowry Bay, Wellington
Oil on board 59 x 75
Signed
$2,000 - 4,000
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82 PEGGY SPICER (1908 - 84)
Maori Life (Pair)
Oil on board 24.5 x 29 each Certificate of Authenticity attached verso
$1,500 - 2,500
83 IDA G EISE (1891 - 1978)
Muddy Creek, Waitakeres
Oil on board 39 x 50 Signed & dated 1941
$1,000 - 2,000
84 IDA H CAREY (1891 - 1982)
Red Parasol
Oil on canvas 60 x 44
$800 - 1,200
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| 81 85 IDA H CAREY (1891-1982) Taylor’s Whare c.1930 Oil on board 28.5 x 33 Signed $1,500 - 2,500 86 IDA H CAREY (1891-1982) Floral Still Life Oil on canvas laid on board 43 x 55 Signed $800 - 1,200 87 ALICE WHYTE (1880-1952) Still Life, Roses (Double Sided) Oil on board 35 x 40.5 $500 - 1,000
verso Lot
Figure
87
88 VIDA STEINERT (1906 - 99)
Nuns on the Beach, c.1965
Oil on canvas
49.5 x 56.5
$6,000 - 8,000
Vida Steinert was a modernist painter, whose work depicted life in New Zealand, specifically local people and landscapes. Steinert worked primarily in oils, watercolours and pencils. Based in Auckland, she became associated with painters Charles Tole, Bessie Christie & Helen Brown.
89
HELEN BROWN (1917 - 86)
Te Whaiti
Watercolour
45 x 51.5
Signed & inscribed
$1,000 - 2,000
90
HELEN BROWN (1917 - 86)
Mahurangi Peninsula
Oil on board 67 x 89
Signed & dated 1966
$7,000 - 10,000
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| 83
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91 JAN NIGRO (1920 - 2012)
Renaissance, 2011
Oil on collage on paper 55 x 67
Signed & dated 2011
$2,000 - 3,500
92 RUBY HUSTON (b. 1938)
Sultans I
Signed & dated 1998
$600 - 1,200
93 RUBY HUSTON (b. 1938)
Still Life With Green Apples
Oil on canvas 45 x 50
Signed & dated 1998
$600 - 1,200
94
GLENDA RANDERSON (b. 1949)
Jennifer, 1982
Oil on linen canvas 122 x 122
Signed
$8,000 - 12,000
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Oil on canvas 45 x 49.5
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97
95 ALICE WHYTE (1880 - 1952)
Boats, Auckland Harbour
Oil on board 39 x 52
Signed
$4,000 - 6,000
96 PATRICIA FRANCE (1911 - 95)
Untitled
Gouache on panel 29 x 31
Signed & dated 1978
$2,500 - 4,500
97
JOAN LINDSEY (b. 1926)
Seabirds No. 1
Oil on board 50 x 80.5
Signed & dated 1972
$1,000 - 2,000
98
JOAN LINDSEY (b. 1926)
Birds Waiting No.3
Oil on board 22.5 x 75.5
Signed & dated 1970
$800 - 1,200
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98
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99
Aphrodite
Watercolour 24.5 x 37.5
Inscribed verso Hop. 60
$300 - 500
100 GABRIELLE HOPE (1916 - 62)
Cat with a Fish
Watercolour and pastel
51.7 x 68.1
Signed
$800 - 1,200
Untitled
Acrylic on paper 46 x 36
Signed
$800 - 1,200
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GABRIELLE HOPE (1916 - 62)
101 SYLVIA SIDDELL (1941 - 2011)
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102
PIERA MCARTHUR (b. 1929)
Pas de Quatre at the Bolshoi
Acrylic, charcoal and oil stick
on paper 48.5 x 63
Signed, inscribed & dated 1990
$2,500 - 3,500
103
ANNIE BAIRD (1932 - 99)
Dunedin City 1987
Watercolour on paper 58.5 x 77
Signed & dated
$2,000 - 3,000
104 JANE EVANS (1946 - 2012)
Larks in Parks, Nelson Street
Theatre
Watercolour 52 x 72
Signed & dated 1981
$4,000 - 6,000
| 91
Lot
3
A. Lois White
Untitled
202 Parnell Road Parnell Auckland New Zealand fran@artcntr.co.nz | 09 366 6045 www.internationalartcentre.co.nz Cloisonne Enamels by Clare Barker Now Available Gallery Open 7 Days Fayum Portrait II Cloisonne enamel on copper 20 x 10 cm | $2,500
Exhibition on view from 6 May
fran@artcntr.co.nz
09 3666 045
www.internationalartcentre.co.nz
Gabryel Harrison - Fleurs
Peonies Never Disappoint
Oil on canvas
91 x 91 cm
$6,500
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| 99
Open now | Free entry
Lot 12 Marti Friedlander Eglinton Valley, 1970