Charles Worsley
British / Aotearoa New Zealand, b.1863, d.1923
Mount Sefton from Foliage Hill
- c. 1905
- Watercolour
- Presented by E. M. Menzies in memory of her father J. H. Menzies, 1949
- 815 x 1145mm
- 69/61
- View on google maps
Location: Sir Robertson and Lady Stewart Gallery
Tags: landscapes (representations), mountains, natural landscapes, rivers, snow (precipitation)
Charles Worsley painted Kakīroa Mount Sefton many times, occasionally at large scale. In this watercolour, he achieves an impressive atmospheric transition from mist-covered snowy peaks and glacier ice to a rushing mountain stream, giving viewers a privileged view into a wild, hidden natural setting that many would not otherwise see.
He Kapuka Oneone – A Handful of Soil (from August 2024)
Exhibition History
Mount Sefton lies in the Mount Cook region of the Southern Alps and Foliage Hill is a short walk from the Mount Cook village where Charles Worsley would have stayed while visiting the region in 1902. He painted many New Zealand scenes such as this. Worsley had an academic style, applying his watercolours with careful precision. The tight brushwork he used in the foreground captures details of the rocks and bush, while he used broader washes to create atmospheric cloud effects around the mountain. Worsley was born in Devon and studied art in London, Antwerp and Paris. He settled in London and began exhibiting at the Royal Institute for British Artists in 1887, then at the Royal Academy in 1889. His wife Beatrice suffered from asthma and in 1896 they left England, arriving in New Zealand in 1898. They lived in a number of places, including Christchurch, before returning to Britain in 1920.