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James Nairn and Mabel Hill at far left. Woman posing with skeleton's arm around her shoulder is Mary Elizabeth Tripe. James McLauchlan Nairn (18 November 1859 – 22 February 1904) [1] was a New Zealand painter who (along with G. P. Nerli) strongly influenced New Zealand painting in the late 19th century. He believed in en plein air or painting ...
Maude Burge (née Williams, 18 May 1865 – 20 May 1957 [1]) was a New Zealand painter influenced by James Nairn. [2] She spent time as an expatriate artist [3] specifically in Europe. Burge was a painting companion of Frances Hodgkins who called Maude Burge a "charming changeable woman" in her published letters.
James MacLauchlan Nairn (1859–1904), Glasgow-born painter who influenced late 19th-century New Zealand painting; Charlotte Nasmyth (1804–1884), landscape painter, daughter of Alexander Nasmyth; Jessie Newbery (1864–1948), Glasgow School artist and embroiderer; James Campbell Noble (1846–1913), landscape and marine painter
James Nairn was born on 14 July 1938, in Ealing near to London. [1] Upon leaving secondary school, he served three years in the Royal Air Force. [2] In 1963, James formed his band with which he performed under the name Jimmy Royal and the Hawks in London pubs and bars. [3]
Group portrait of students at the Wellington School of Design. Mabel Hill is at far left with James Nairn; Mollie Tripe has the skeleton's arm around her shoulder. Mabel Hill (3 March 1872 – 18 November 1956) was a New Zealand artist known for landscapes, portraits, and floral still lifes. She taught at the Wellington School of Design.
She studied art at the Wellington Technical College and was taught by James Nairn, Mary Tripe and Mabel Hill. [2] Kimbell traveled and studied in Europe from 1911 through 1913. Upon leaving Europe she settled in Australia [4] In 1917 she married Alfred Charles Sherwood whom she divorced in 1922.
Brit Bunkley (born 1955) – sculptor, installation artist and digital/video artist; Fanny Buss (1910–1986) – textile artist, fashion designer, printmaker and book illustrator; Debra Bustin (born 1957) – visual artist; Maude Burge (1865–1957) – painter; Sulieti Fieme'a Burrows (born 1951) – tapa cloth artist
James Nairn and Mabel Hill are at far left. Tripe studied at the Canterbury School of Art [1] and the new Wellington School of Design (WSD), then under the direction of its founder, Arthur Dewhurst Riley. She graduated from the WSD in 1890 with a teaching certificate and went on to get a master's certificate in 1894. [2]