Wednesday 12 June 2019
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland Opens Saturday 10 August at Auckland Art Gallery
New exhibition coincides with centenary of Colin McCahon’s birth
Colin McCahon, Moby Dick is sighted off Muriwai Beach, 1972, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, on loan from a private collection
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki presents A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland, an exhibition of work by one of New Zealand’s foremost artists, Colin McCahon (1919–1987), opening Saturday 10 August.
McCahon’s work is marked by a strong spirit of experimentalism and independence. Today, he is widely regarded as one
Australasia’s key 20th-century artists.
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland traces the artist’s development over the 30 years he lived in Tāmaki MakaurauAuckland, and reveals the significance
that place had for his painting and its presence in his art.
Auckland Art Gallery Director Kirsten Paisley says, ‘Colin McCahon’s contribution to art in New Zealand is immense. Not
only was he a leading painter, but also an influential teacher, curator and critic. And he is a significant figure in
Auckland Art Gallery’s history, serving as a Keeper and later Assistant Director over a period of almost a decade.’
‘We are excited to share this exhibition, which presents an in-depth look at some of McCahon’s most important art works
– paintings that continue to resonate with us a century after his birth.’
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland features 25 key paintings drawn from Auckland Art Gallery’s renowned collection, as well as from private holdings, and
includes works that have rarely been seen.
The exhibition marks the first public display of painted windows from the Convent Chapel of the Sisters of our Lady of
the Missions, Remuera. Completed by McCahon in 1965, the 13 glass panels came from the decommissioned chapel and were
gifted by the Sisters to the people of Auckland in 1989. Preserved by the Gallery’s conservation team, the windows will
be displayed with digital renderings of how they first appeared when installed in the Chapel.
Shifting north in 1953, from Christchurch to Titirangi in West Auckland, McCahon’s physical relocation parallels a move
away from figurative paintings based on Bible stories and towards an engagement with his immediate environment. Over the
subsequent 30 years, his painting reflected local places: the kauri forest surrounding his house at French Bay; the
factory roofs of the inner city; the sun moving over the Waitakeres; and the gannet colony at Muriwai. A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland explores the deepening metaphorical significance of the Auckland landscape in McCahon’s painting.
The exhibition will also explore the broader context in which McCahon painted and his role as an energetic force and
active participant in the local art scene.
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland is curated by Auckland Art Gallery’s curators Ron Brownson and Julia Waite.
Exhibition details
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland
When: Saturday 10 August 2019 to Monday 27 January 2020, 10am – 5pm daily
Where: Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
Admission: Free with Gallery entry
From the Archive: Colin McCahon in Auckland
Colin McCahon’s relationship with Auckland Art Gallery is explored in a second exhibition, From the Archive: Colin McCahon in Auckland, which opens Saturday 13 July. Utilising photographs, ephemera and publications from Auckland Art Gallery’s E H
McCormick Research Library, the archive exhibition takes visitors closer inside McCahon’s days as a curator, and later
teacher, as he moves from a career at Auckland City Art Gallery (now known as Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki), to
lecturing at Elam School of Fine Arts, before becoming a full-time painter in the early 1970s.
From the Archive: Colin McCahon in Auckland is co-curated by the artist’s grandson Finn McCahon-Jones and Gallery archivist Caroline McBride.
Exhibition details
A Place to Paint: Colin McCahon in Auckland
When: Saturday 13 July 2019 to early 2020, 10am – 5pm daily
Where: Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
Admission: Free with Gallery entry
ends