Rosalie Gascoigne

Rosalie Gascoigne

Author: Martin Gascoigne

Publisher: ANU Press

Published: 2019-09-16

Total Pages: 445

ISBN-13: 1760462357

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Rosalie Gascoigne (1917–1999) was a highly regarded Australian artist whose assemblages of found materials embraced landscape, still life, minimalism, arte povera and installations. She was 57 when she had her first exhibition. Behind this late coming-out lay a long and unusual preparation in looking at nature for its aesthetic qualities, collecting found objects, making flower arrangements and practising ikebana. Her art found an appreciative audience from the start. She was a people person, and it pleased her that through her exhibiting career of 25 years, her works were acquired by people of all ages, interests and backgrounds, as well as by the major public institutions on both sides of the Tasman Sea.


The Spirit of Colin McCahon

The Spirit of Colin McCahon

Author: Zoe Alderton

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2015-02-27

Total Pages: 395

ISBN-13: 1443875937

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The Spirit of Colin McCahon provides a vivid historical contextualisation of New Zealand’s premier modern artist, clearly explaining his esoteric religious themes and symbols. Via a framework of visual rhetoric, this book explores the social factors that formed McCahon’s religious and environmental beliefs, and justifications as to why his audience often missed the intended point of spiritual his discourse – or chose to ignore it. The Spirit of Colin McCahon tracks the intricate process by which the artist’s body of work turned from optimism to misery, and explains the many communicative techniques he employed in order to arrest suspicion towards his Christian prophecy. More broadly, The Spirit of Colin McCahon outlines a model of analysis for the intersection of art and religion, and the place of images as rhetorical devices within Antipodean culture. The emerging field of religion and visual culture is important not only to students of New Zealand art history, but also to a growing field of appreciation for the communicative power of images. This book provides a helpful model for examining art and literature as social and religious tools, and advances the importance of visual rhetoric within studies of art and social expression.


Colin McCahon: Is This the Promised Land?

Colin McCahon: Is This the Promised Land?

Author: Peter Simpson

Publisher: Auckland University Press

Published: 2020-06-11

Total Pages: 935

ISBN-13: 1776710568

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The second of an extraordinary two-volume work chronicling forty-five years of painting by our most important artist, Colin McCahon. Colin McCahon (1919–1987) was New Zealand's greatest twentieth-century artist. Through landscapes, biblical paintings, abstraction, and the introduction of words and Maori motifs, McCahon's work came to define a distinctly New Zealand modernist idiom. Collected and exhibited extensively in Australasia and Europe, McCahon's work has not been assessed as a whole for thirty-five years. In this richly illustrated two-volume work, written in an accessible style and published to coincide with the centenary of Colin McCahon's birth, leading McCahon scholar, writer, and curator Dr Peter Simpson chronicles the evolution of the artist's work over McCahon's entire forty-five-year career. Simpson has enjoyed unprecedented access to McCahon's extensive correspondence with friends, family, dealers, patrons, and others. This material enables us to begin to understand McCahon's work as the artist himself conceived it. Each volume includes over three-hundred illustrations in colour, with a generous selection of reproductions of McCahon's work (many never previously published), plus photographs, catalogue covers, facsimiles, and other illustrative material. These books will be the definitive work on New Zealand's leading artist for many years to come.


Colin McCahon

Colin McCahon

Author: Colin McCahon

Publisher:

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 8

ISBN-13:

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The exhibition integrates works for several New Zealand and Australian artists for whom McCahon's art can be seen to have been influential or with which it resonates: Shane Cotton, Rosalie Gascoigne, Brent Harris, Emily Kam Kngwarray, Kitty Kantilla Kutuwalumi, Yvonne Koolmatrie, Robert MacPherson, David Stephenson, Imants Tillers, Judy Watson.


Making Ends Meet

Making Ends Meet

Author: Ian Wedde

Publisher: Victoria University Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13: 9780864735034

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Passionate, witty, and erudite, these essays by a radical curator describe how museums approach their sometimes conflicting missions to sponsor scholarship, generate popular appeal, and claim social significance. This analysis includes discussions of art and ethnology, the failure of late-Modernist art history, the construction of official culture, the intellectual history of European exploration in the Pacific, problems with cultural studies of the Pakeha Maori, and the conservation of archives and narratives.


The Verse Novel

The Verse Novel

Author: Linda Weste

Publisher: Australian Scholarly Publishing

Published: 2023-07-28

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13: 1922669237

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In these thirty-five interviews with verse novelists from Australia and Aotearoa–New Zealand, Linda Weste explores the uniqueness of storytelling through poetry and the genre of the verse novel. Her subjects are notable representatives of a region where verse novels for Adults, Children and Young Adults thrive; among them is Steven Herrick, winner of the prestigious Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis in 2019; and what they have to say enriches our understanding of the verse novel across each of its publishing categories.


Home and Away

Home and Away

Author: William McAloon

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

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"Published on the occasion of the exhibition Home and away: contemporary Australian and New Zealand art from the Chartwell collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tarnaki 4 June-22 August 1999" -- T.p. verso.


Heidegger's Topology

Heidegger's Topology

Author: Jeff Malpas

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2008-08-29

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 0262250330

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This groundbreaking inquiry into the centrality of place in Martin Heidegger's thinking offers not only an illuminating reading of Heidegger's thought but a detailed investigation into the way in which the concept of place relates to core philosophical issues. In Heidegger's Topology, Jeff Malpas argues that an engagement with place, explicit in Heidegger's later work, informs Heidegger's thought as a whole. What guides Heidegger's thinking, Malpas writes, is a conception of philosophy's starting point: our finding ourselves already "there," situated in the world, in "place". Heidegger's concepts of being and place, he argues, are inextricably bound together. Malpas follows the development of Heidegger's topology through three stages: the early period of the 1910s and 1920s, through Being and Time, centered on the "meaning of being"; the middle period of the 1930s into the 1940s, centered on the "truth of being"; and the late period from the mid-1940s on, when the "place of being" comes to the fore. (Malpas also challenges the widely repeated arguments that link Heidegger's notions of place and belonging to his entanglement with Nazism.) The significance of Heidegger as a thinker of place, Malpas claims, lies not only in Heidegger's own investigations but also in the way that spatial and topographic thinking has flowed from Heidegger's work into that of other key thinkers of the past 60 years.