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The catalogue for the exhibition Contemporary New Zealand Painting and Sculpture 1962 noted the medium of Macfarlane's three paintings as p.v.a.. Macfarlane continued to be an ardent supporter of the medium and years later continued to hand out extracts copied from Lawrence Jensen's book Synthetic Painting Media published by Prentice Hall in ...
Joseph Benwell Clark (1857–1938) – English landscape painter and book illustrator; Stanhope Forbes (1857–1947) – British artist, founder of the Newlyn School; Arthur Hacker (1858–1919) – English classicist painter; Henry Scott Tuke (1858–1929) – English painter who lived in Cornwall, best known for his maritime paintings and ...
Ida Carey (1891–1982) – painter and art teacher; Steve Carr – video artist, sculptor and photographer; Len Castle (1924–2011) – potter; Ruth Castle (born 1931) – weaver; Tim Chadwick (1962–2010) – painter and mixed media artist; Vera Chapman (1885–1953) – painter; Chris Charteris (born 1966) – jeweller
The Group was an informal but influential art association formed in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1927. Initially begun by ex-students from Canterbury College of Art, its aim was to provide a freer, more experimental alternative to the academic salon painting exhibitions of the Canterbury Society of Arts.
Whero O Te Rangi Bailey (1935—2016), weaver and textile artist; Gertrude Ball (1879–1971), wood engraver and painter; Ria Bancroft (1907–1993), sculptor; Nola Barron (born 1931), potter
It was located in the Christchurch Botanic Gardens, adjacent to Canterbury Museum, where the building still stands unused, as of 2019. [5] Christchurch City Council committed funds to buying land for a new gallery in 1995 and purchased the Christchurch Art Gallery site in 1996. A competition to design the new gallery was launched in 1998.
The Newlyn School was an art colony of artists based in or near Newlyn, a fishing village adjacent to Penzance, on the south coast of Cornwall, from the 1880s until the early twentieth century. The establishment of the Newlyn School was reminiscent of the Barbizon School in France, where artists fled Paris to paint in a more pure setting ...