AUCKLAND.- More than 150 historic oil portraits of Māori and Pākehā are being shown at
Auckland Art Gallery in the largest ever exhibition of work by artist Gottfried Lindauer.
The Māori Portraits: Gottfried Lindauers New Zealand features artworks from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It opened Saturday 22 October and entry is free.
After a public search to locate further portraits by Lindauer, Auckland Art Gallery has discovered 36 bona fide artworks from around the world. At least six of these are being shown in the exhibition.
Gallery Director Rhana Devenport says this is the most significant exhibition of Māori portraits to ever be seen.
It will be a once in a lifetime opportunity to see this many Lindauer oil paintings together, which are an important part of Aotearoa New Zealands story and identity, she says.
The Māori Portraits: Gottfried Lindauers New Zealand celebrates artist Gottfried Lindauer (18391926), New Zealands pioneering and most prolific portrait painter and a key cultural figure in the countrys art history.
The exhibition brings together an array of finely-detailed portraits of Māori rangatira (men and women of standing in their communities) in both traditional and western dress, portraits of colonial settlers, and large paintings depicting Māori life and customs.
Lindauers personal history, from his art training and migration from Europe to his artistic inventions once in New Zealand, is being highlighted, bringing new insights to the relevance of his lifes work in the 21st century.
New ways to understand how this period of change, controversy and colonisation was visually recorded also are investigated in the exhibition, as the role of photography in the creation of Lindauers portraits is explored.
Independent curator Ngahiraka Mason, who until 2015 was Auckland Art Gallerys Indigenous Curator, Māori Art, has been working on the project for more than four years. The Gallerys current Curator, Māori Art, Nigel Borell, is assisting Mason.
Mason says a strong feature of the show are the Māori portraits as they represent a diverse portrayal of confident and powerfully poised Māori ancestors.
The exhibition gives an incredible insight into iwi and hapu (community) leadership of the period. Lindauers portraits of rangatira have tremendous mana (prestige) with their striking likeness or resemblance of subjects, she says.
Historical photographs from the period, historic correspondence and Māori taonga (treasures) that were gifted to the artist, plus memorabilia and documentaries also offer a deeper awareness into this fascinating period of New Zealands history.
Mason says many of the people depicted in the portraits have descendants living today.
These artworks, although impressive in their own right, are more than just portraits, theyre living connections to the past, and Auckland Art Gallery is proud to be able to facilitate that connection, she says.
Alongside the main show, the Gallery is running a smaller exhibition, Identifying Lindauer: His Materials and Techniques. This looks at Lindauers art practice and provide insights by comparing a number of his original works with real-life forgeries.