Commentary
Beyond The Fields We Know

Beyond The Fields We Know

In the canons of received taste, the unicorn figurine doesn’t rank terribly highly beyond kitsch. Sitting in your hand, it’s cutesy, twee, trivial and quaint (though a piece of master-worked Venetian glass from Murano is a pricey and collectable item).

Commentary
Colin McCahon: Five Years in Christchurch, 1948–53

Colin McCahon: Five Years in Christchurch, 1948–53

Prior to moving to Christchurch in March 1948, Colin McCahon and his family spent a little over a year living in Muritai Street, Tahunanui, on the outskirts of Nelson city. It was his most productive period as a painter to date – a phase dominated by figurative paintings with some landscapes. The products of this prolific period were brought together in his first major one-person show, at Wellington Public Library in February 1948, organised by his Dunedin friend, Ron O’Reilly. An exhibition of forty-two works made between 1939 to 1948, more than half produced in 1947, it consisted of roughly equal numbers of landscapes (including Otago Peninsula and Maitai Valley), biblical paintings (King of the Jews, Crucifixion according to St Mark ), and non-biblical figurative works (A candle in a dark room, The Family). Although it was reviewed favourably in The Listener by J.C. Beaglehole, the subsequent letters column ran hot with controversy, and it brought McCahon to national attention.

Collection
James 3: Practical Religion

Colin McCahon James 3: Practical Religion

Selected texts from James 2, New English Bible hand-painted in black over a painted yellowish sepia background. The texts are from James 2:26, 2:18 and 2:16, not James 3 as inscribed by the artist.

The text reads:

as the body is dead when there is no breath left in it, so faith divorced from deeds is lifeless as a corpse.

Prove to me that this faith you speak of is real though not accompanied by deeds

"GOOD LUCK TO YOU, KEEP YOURSELVES WARM, HAVE PLENTY TO EAT."

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