Art Gallery Clock Tower
Search our collection Over 12,000 works of Art Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki website
quick search   |   detailed search   |   highlights
Image list - Brief details and a small image. Text list - Brief details without images. Lightbox - Mulitiple images on one page. Full Detail - Large image and full details.
Full Detail - Large image and full details.
Search Results / Result 1 of 1
Record Image
Title Taranaki
Artist Christopher Perkins
Production Date 1931
Medium oil on canvas
Support canvas
Signature/Marks Cr. P. (l.l.)
Size (hxw) 508 x 914mm
Classification Painting
Department New Zealand Art
Subject Headings mountains
buildings
dairy farms
dairy plants
factories
industry
Subject Place Mt. Taranaki/Taranaki (region)/New Zealand
Credit Line Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, purchased 1968
Copyright Status Copying restrictions apply
Acquisition Method Purchase
Accession Date 1968
Accession No 1968/35
Other Id 1968/83
Curator's Description Impressed by the almost perfectly conical form of Taranaki, English artist Christopher Perkins regretted that he could not produce a series of views of the mountain in the manner of Hokusai's views of Fujiyama. Yet by fusing elements of the Japanese ukiyo-e tradition and a flattened, modernist European style, he produced an image of Taranaki which has become a celebrated icon of New Zealand landscape painting. The austere, angular building is a typical New Zealand dairy factory, indicator of a primary national industry, while the fertility of the Taranaki area, essential to the success of that industry, is implied by the clouds clinging to the mountain at the snowline. Hard, clear light was viewed by Perkins as a unique characteristic of the New Zealand landscape. A recruit of the La Trobe scheme, which aimed to improve the standard of local art instruction, Perkins taught at Wellington Technical College and was an early advocate of a distinctly indigenous school of painting. Despite the brevity of his stay here from 1929 to 1933, his brand of regional realism was influential on later generations of artists. Drawn to the Antipodes by a misguided preconception of an exotic Gauguinesque existence and not anticipating the conservatism of the local environment, Perkins' advanced views quickly alienated him from the art establishment of the day. Not until the 1960s was he rehabilitated into the mainstream history of New Zealand art. (from The Guide, 2001)
Image list - Brief details and a small image. Text list - Brief details without images. Lightbox - Mulitiple images on one page. Full Detail - Large image and full details.
Currently at start of search results Currently at start of search results Currently at end of search results Currently at end of search results
Full Detail - Large image and full details