Collection
Summer Storm near Wanaka

Doris Lusk Summer Storm near Wanaka

Summer Storm Near Wanaka is a painting from the second great phase of Doris Lusk’s work. Along with other progressive young artists in the 1930s and 1940s, Lusk had approached the New Zealand landscape with a modern eye and a hard-edged technique, interested not only in its industries but in representing characteristic local landforms. In the early 1960s she began a new period of experimentation in which her work grew increasingly abstract. ‘I’m not an abstract painter,’ she noted in the late 1960s, ‘But I am very much in sympathy with abstract painting. I admire the way my students can cope with abstract painting. But I am very interested in the wider implications of landscape…’ In Summer Storm Near Wanaka, she reduced the dramatic landscape of Central Otago to a rhythmic series of brushstrokes and daubs that convey a remarkable energy. The clouds boil over distant hills, and powerful natural forces shape the land into alien contours. Lusk made many paintings over several decades in the Central Otago region, continually drawn, as she said later in life, to its ‘curious tonal quality, its lack of conventional greens, and the brilliant light and most intractable colour of those hills’.

(March 2018)

Notes
The empire strikes back?

The empire strikes back?

Stormtroopers in the Gallery? Are these pieces of a yet-to-be-constructed Imperial army?

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Hopefully back to it soon

Hopefully back to it soon

We totally agree!

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Observation/Action/Replanting

Observation/Action/Replanting

I'm finding the demolition of buildings in Lyttelton (from the Timeball to the dairy) a very visible and unpleasant process. Where, for me, much of the loss in the central city is at present only made real through photographs and irate letters in the press, in Lyttelton - with no sealed off 'red zone' to conceal change - every new building that comes down leaves a very visceral gap in the fabric of my town. The stump of a tooth in a battered mouth.

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It's a mug's game

It's a mug's game

Spotted in the Gallery shop, these new coffee mugs are sure to appeal to a certain type of customer...

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1... 2... 3...

1... 2... 3...

3 great things that Guy wants to see when we re-open.

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Competition time!

Competition time!

It's a titanic struggle between the giants of their fields, where opposing teams pit their wits against each other in a do or die competition. No, for once not the RWC. It's the annual Best Design Awards.

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