Stephanie Sheehan

Aotearoa New Zealand, b.1949, d.2023

Metamorphosis

  • c. 2000
  • Acrylic on canvas
  • Gift of the artist, 2023
  • 496 x 600mm
  • 2023/118

This label was used when the painting was displayed to mark the artist's death in 2023.

The Gallery was saddened by the recent death of painter Stephanie Sheehan. Born in Ōtautahi Christchurch, Stephanie was part of a notable generation of artists who studied at the University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Mark Adams, Rhondda Bosworth, Philip Clairmont, Allie Eagle, Bill Hammond, Joanne Hardy and Allen Maddox. She completed her Diploma of Fine Arts in 1974. Sheehan’s work was included in the important feminist art exhibition Woman’s Art: An Exhibition of Six Women Artists curated by Allie Eagle for the Robert McDougall Art Gallery in 1975. Her thoughts on being a woman artist in the male dominated arts world of the 1970s were expressed in the accompanying catalogue: It has been generally accepted that woman has been a slave too long; unfortunately a slave mentality is imposed on us at birth and to express oneself truthfully involves throwing off more chains than one was aware of carrying. I have ceased to paint men’s doings. My paintings are an extension of myself, as a woman I think.

Sheehan was one of the few young women artists invited to exhibit with The Group in the early 1970s. She formed a close and enduring friendship with the potter Yvonne Rust, whom she worked with and lived close to in Tokerau Beach, Northland from the mid 1970s. Rust had been her high school art teacher in Christchurch during the 1960s, and remained her mentor through to the 1990s. In the 2000s Sheehan returned to Christchurch and continued exhibiting and painting. Our thoughts go out to her family and friends.

Rest in Peace Steph.