Collection
Untitled (Meadow)

Olivia Spencer Bower Untitled (Meadow)

In a career that spanned almost 60 years, and included a range of art-making techniques, Olivia Spencer Bower was best known for her watercolours. She valued the medium’s portability, which enabled her to work directly in the landscape. Her family home, Claxby, was located on the Canterbury Plains near Eyreton, and she made many sketching exhibitions up into the high country, along the Waimakariri River and along both coasts of the South Island. This view of lupins in a meadow, crisply framed by the snowy mountains of Ka Tiritiri o Te Moana / the Southern Alps, reflects both her compositional skill and her ability to create a sense of immediacy and spaciousness. Born in England, Spencer Bower’s family came to New Zealand in 1920, and she studied at the Canterbury College School of Art before attending the Slade School of Art in London in 1929. She returned to New Zealand in 1931. She devoted her life to painting and, late in her life, established a Foundation which finances an annual scholarship enabling an artist to work full time for one year.

(Turn, Turn, Turn: A Year in Art, 27 July 2019 – 8 March 2020)

Exhibition

From the Sun Deck: McCahon's Titirangi

Colin McCahon’s shift to Titirangi in 1953 was a watershed moment in the artist’s career, providing the inspiration for him to develop his interest in cubism and abstraction.

Exhibition

Reading the Swell

Drawing its inspiration from the sea, this exhibition highlights the Gallery's collection of maritime paintings, drawings, prints, photographs and ceramics, alongside scrimshaw from Canterbury Museum's collection.

Exhibition

Ship Songs

A small but poetic exhibition looking at early European and Māori representations of seafaring vessels, with the Charlotte Jane as a focal point.

Exhibition

Bloomsbury South: The Arts in Christchurch 1933-1953

A selection of ephemera, books, sheet music and art brought together to mark the publication of Bloomsbury South: The Arts in Christchurch 1933-1953 by Peter Simpson.

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