Colin McCahon
Aotearoa New Zealand, b.1919, d.1987
Blind V
- 1974
- Synthetic polymer paint on unstretched canvas
- Purchased 1975
- Reproduced courtesy of Colin McCahon Research and Publication Trust
- 1750 x 900mm
- 75/50
Tags: abstraction, monochrome, squares (geometric figures), words
The word ‘blind’ refers to a screen that cuts out light, but Colin McCahon also uses it to refer to an absence of vision. Questions of faith were important to McCahon and he often used references to blindness to suggest the inability to see the real essence and value of things. McCahon’s style was highly personal and distinctive. Blind V is part of a series of five works painted onto window blinds. The abstract forms have the feel of a beach and sky and it has been suggested that the ‘blindness’ which McCahon refers to was the inability of New Zealanders to really see and appreciate their own unique environment.
McCahon is regarded by many as New Zealand’s greatest contemporary artist. Born in Timaru, he studied art in Dunedin. He lived in Christchurch for a time, became keeper and assistant director at Auckland Art Gallery, then lecturer in painting at the Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland, before taking up painting full time in 1970.