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The Dowse Art Museum presents "Embodied Knowledge", an exhibition of "significant sculptural works made by women artists during a tumultuous period of Aotearoa New Zealand's art history" featuring older and new works by Christine Hellyar, Maureen Lander, Vivian Lynn, Pauline Rhodes, The Estate of L. Budd. [64] A pendant exhibition, Can Tame ...
Emily Valentine Bullock (living), jeweller and creator of wearable art; Maude Burge (1865–1957), painter; Sulieti Fieme'a Burrows (born 1951), tapa cloth artist; Mirranda Burton (born 1973), printmaker and graphic novel illustrator; Fanny Buss (1910–1986), textile artist, fashion designer, printmaker and book illustrator; Debra Bustin (born ...
[4] [12] In 1988, A Woman's Picture Book: 25 Women Artists of Aotearoa (New Zealand) was published by Spiral and the Government Printing Office. It was compiled and edited by Evans, Lonie and Tilly Lloyd. [4] Most of the women artists featured in the book had exhibited pieces in the Women's Gallery and the book includes information about the ...
Pages in category "New Zealand women artists" The following 114 pages are in this category, out of 114 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. -
List of New Zealand women artists; New Zealand art; References This page was last edited on 18 January 2025, at 10:58 (UTC). Text is available under ...
Warwick Brown: 100 New Zealand paintings: By 100 New Zealand artists. Godwit Press: Auckland, 1995. Elizabeth Grierson: Louise Henderson. Art New Zealand, vol 46, pp77, Autumn 1988. Louise Henderson, 'Embroidery as a Living Art', Art New Zealand, vol 14, pp37–38, September 1941. Anne Kirker, New Zealand Women Artists: A Survey of 150 Years.
The building was registered in 1981 by Heritage New Zealand as a Category 2 Historic Place. [11] When the Wellington Central Library relocated to its new Ian Athfield-designed building in 1991, [12] the building underwent a major refurbishment so it could meet the needs of a contemporary art gallery. The Gallery's window installation was ...
Eagle was integrally involved in the women's art movement that emerged in New Zealand in the 1970s, initially most strongly expressed in Christchurch. [5]: 189 In June 1975 Eagle organised Six Women Artists at the Robert McDougall Art Gallery, the first public exhibition in New Zealand focused solely "on the premise of declaring female identity".