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Alfred Walsh
"In the Otira, 1905"
Watercolour Collection of the Robert
McDougall Art Gallery. Presented by the Canterbury Society
of Arts, 1932. |
Alfred Walsh Canterbury Vignettes Series
12 Feburary - 5 March 2000
From February to August the Gallery will be presenting a series
of seven historical 'vignette' exhibitions comprising the work
of eight prominent Canterbury artists.
Two of these artists worked in the nineteenth century and two during the early years of
the twentieth century. Each exhibition will be accompanied by an illustrated publication
that profiles the artist and their works selected for the Vignette.
To open the Vignette Series two exhibitions will run almost concurrently. They feature
the work of the marine painter John Gibb and the plein air watercolourist Alfred Walsh.
Alfred Wilson Walsh The plein air movement that emerged in New Zealand painting in the
1880s was dominated in the North Island by James Nairn and his followers in Wellington,
and in the South Island by the watercolourist Alfred Walsh. In contrast to the previous
generation of New Zealand painters, Walsh eschewed the romantic and sentimental approaches
to nature. Working spontaneously, he responded to his subjects with a unique clarity of
vision and an attention to light and colour which was uncommon among many of his
contemporaries. Walsh was born in Australia at Kyneton, Victoria, in 1859 and came to New
Zealand with his parents, who settled in Dunedin in the 1860s. From an early age, he had a
fascination with nature and spent his spare time sketching out of doors. On leaving school
Walsh joined the Otago Public Works Department as a draughtsman and began attending
evening classes at David Con Hutton's Dunedin School of Art, where he was considered a
young artist of much promise. In 1878 he was appointed as a student teacher at the school
and held that position until 1883 when the art school was forced to cut its staff. Three
years later Walsh was successful in his application for the post of Assistant Master at
Canterbury College School of Art and remained on the teaching staff until 1911. After his
retirement, he moved to Auckland, where he married in 1912 just four years before his
death. Walsh had first started exhibiting in the late 1870s while a student at Dunedin
School of Art. From 1883 his paintings were seen at annual society exhibitions in
Auckland, Christchurch and Wellington. His favourite painting places were in the Otira
region, Kaikoura and Westland and watercolours made at these locations were regularly
exhibited thorough the 1890s and 1900s. Although he never travelled outside New Zealand,
Walsh's works were sent to the major international exhibitions in Australia as early as
1888. This vignette comprises 22 works, mostly in watercolour, which Walsh made en plein
air between 1884 and 1913. Whilst several are from the Gallery"s collection others
have been made available on loan from a number of private and institutional sources.
Neil Roberts
The Vignette Series:
John
Gibb (1831 - 1909) 5 February - 5 March
Alfred
Walsh (1859 - 1916) 12 February - 12 March
Charles
Kidson (1867 - 1908) 25 March - 30 April
Leonard
Booth (1879 - 1977) 13 May - 18 June
Grace
Butler (1870 - 1962) 10 June - 6 August
Archibald
Nicoll (1886 - 1953) 1 July - 6 August
Richard
(1882 - 1955) & Elizabeth Wallwork (1884 - 1969) 26 August
- 24 September
This exhibition was held at the Robert McDougall Art Gallery in the Botanic Gardens.
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