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    HomeCollectionDrawing 5: XIX
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    Carl Sydow

    Aotearoa New Zealand, b.1940, d.1975

    Drawing 5: XIX

    • 1975
    • Letrafilm and ink on paper
    • Purchased 1976
    • 602 x 815mm
    • 76/05

    Tags: abstraction, geometric abstraction, Op art, patterns (design elements)

    Save to My Gallery

    Exhibition History

    Carl Sydow Around 1971. Perspex, hose. Sydow family collection
    Sydow: Tomorrow Never Knows
    Mervyn Williams Chromatic Invention No 11 (A) 1969. Serigraph. Collection of Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetū 2009
    Op + Pop
    Drawing 5,xix,1975, Carl Sydow (detail)Christchurch Art GalleryReproduced with persmissionletrafilm/letratone1975    
    Carl Sydow (1940-1975) Memorial Exhibition
    Image: uploads/2025_07/76_05.jpg

    Related reading: Op + Pop

    Notes
    To the memory of Julian Dashper

    To the memory of Julian Dashper

    One of the highlights for staff over the eight or so years that the Christchurch Art Gallery was open prior to the shakes was the opportunity to work alongside Julian Dashper on his exhibition To The Unknown New Zealander. 

    Notes
    Untitled 1956 by Gordon Walters

    Untitled 1956 by Gordon Walters

    This article first appeared as 'Balancing act' in The Press on 17 August 2012.

    Notes
    Glittering

    Glittering

    When it comes to posting comprehensive pictures of your new exhibitions online, opinion is divided.

    Notes
    Selected proofs

    Selected proofs

    Peter Trevelyan's exhibition Selected Proofs is currently on at the University of Canterbury's  SOFA Gallery until 7th September.

    My Favourite
    Julian Dashper's Untitled 1996

    Julian Dashper's Untitled 1996

    Sound artist Paul Sutherland chooses his favourite work from the Gallery’s collection.

     

    Continued

    Article
    The pleasure of making: objects taking centre stage in the space of the art gallery

    The pleasure of making: objects taking centre stage in the space of the art gallery

    Was it serendipity that the opening of Christchurch Art Gallery's Burster Flipper Wobbler Dripper Spinner Stacker Shaker Maker coincided with that of Slip Cast, a group exhibition at the Dowse Art Museum that also focused on the pleasure that artists take in manipulating materials in the process of making art?

    Continued

    Article
    New Zealand in the Biennale of Sydney and the Biennale of Sydney in New Zealand

    New Zealand in the Biennale of Sydney and the Biennale of Sydney in New Zealand

    and the Biennale of Sydney in New Zealand

    Continued

    Collection
    Black on white

    Gordon Walters Black on white

    Gordon Walters is best-known for work that fused the influence of European modernist art and Māori and Pacific art forms, particularly the koru motif of painted kōwhaiwhai rafter designs. Walters’ influences from European modernism included the hard-edged geometric abstractions of Victor Vasarely and Auguste Herbin, seen while in Europe in 1950–51. Walters made his first optically charged ‘koru paintings’ in 1956, but didn’t show them until 1966 when he first exhibited this painting in Auckland.

    Walters’ adaptation of the koru has been both admired and criticised by cultural commentators. Walters himself, when discussing the motif, increasingly focused on the fine mechanics of abstraction:

    'What I’ve done to the form is push it more in the direction of geometry. So that I can have in my painting not only a positive/negative effect of black and white, but I can also have a working of vertical and horizontal, which is equally important.' (Op + Pop, 6 February – 19 June 2016)

    Collection
    Untitled 'Meander' drawing

    Carl Sydow Untitled 'Meander' drawing

    Collection
    Untitled 'Meander' drawing

    Carl Sydow Untitled 'Meander' drawing

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